Showing posts with label Badminton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Badminton. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

No female shuttlers for Asian, CW Games - Bangladesh

The Bangladesh Badminton Federation has decided not to send any female badminton players to the upcoming Asian Games and Commonwealth Games, disregarding the recent performances of female shuttlers in recent international events.

“The female shuttlers are not up to the international standard. If we send them to such big tournaments not only will they be embarrassed, our sport's image will be blemished,” claimed the federation's joint secretary Golam Aziz Jilai, defending the decision to send only male shuttlers to these games.

However, reality says something different. The last two medals earned from international events were courtesy of female shuttlers. The pair of Shapla Akter and Rasel Kabir won a bronze medal in the mixed doubles event of the 2010 SA Games while Shapla also won another bronze in the singles event of an international tournament in the same year in Dhaka.

Aiman Ibne Zaman and Raisuddin will participate in the Commonwealth Games while Enamul Haque and Ahsan Habib will take part in the Asian games.
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Friday, March 28, 2014

Beng Hee is capable of delivering a gold medal for Malaysia

David Pearson giving some tips to national No. 2 Mohd Nafiizwan Adnan. - Photo by KNG ZHENG GUAN / The Star
Beng Hee who has two Asian Games gold medals from 2002 and 2006, however has been facing a dip in form of late, mostly due to the age factor.

However, Pearson believes the world No. 27 can still go out with a bang as the main challengers for gold at the Asian Games are still within his range. They are world No. 18 Saurav Ghosal of India, world No. 33 Max Lee of Hong Kong as well as national No. 2 Mohd Nafiizwan Adnan.

“In a way, even an old dog can still learn new tricks and it depends on whether Beng Hee wants to go out with a sting, or just a damp squib,” said Pearson who arrived here last Thursday at Beng Hee’s request.

“The way I look at it, the other guys ... Saurav and Max are not out of Beng Hee’s range and he can still do it if he wants to.

“But, to do that he has to be more open-minded and be prepared to do better.

“Right now, I’m working a bit on the mental side with him, but it’s mostly technical.

“I’m getting him to be more aggressive especially in terms of his body language because he tends to be a little too passive at times.

“He’s got to be a bit more aware of his surroundings and be prepared to go for the shots at the right time. At the end of the day, it’s all about learning new things every day.”

Commenting on Massaro, Pearson admitted that while her squash is not the nicest to watch, she deserves credit for becoming the first Englishwoman to win the world title since Cassie Jackman in 1999.

“Laura’s put in a lot of hard work because she was never the most natural player and she has had to change a lot in her game, especially her technique,” said Pearson.

“Her squash may not be the nicest to watch but she’s whole-hearted ... works hard, and she definitely deserves this win. She should be proud of herself.”

Pearson, who has been based in Harrogate, England, for the past 23 years, will join a sharing session with the national and state-based coaches for three days starting today, before heading home on Monday.
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Saturday, November 2, 2013

Fong Wei makes family proud with bronze medal

Malaysia's Chai Fong Wei in action in the 'gunshu' (stick) event at the 12th World Wushu Championships in Kuala Lumpur on Saturday. She finished third with 9.62 points, behind winner Zheng Shaoyi of China and Hong Kong's Geng Xiao Ling. - BERNAMA Photo
Malaysia's Chai Fong Wei in action in the 'gunshu' (stick) event at the 12th World Wushu Championships in Kuala Lumpur on Saturday. She finished third with 9.62 points, behind winner Zheng Shaoyi of China and Hong Kong's Geng Xiao Ling. - BERNAMA Photo

KUALA LUMPUR: Chai Fong Ying, the two-time Asian Games champion, is not competing but the Chai family members were all smiles at the World Wushu Championships at the Kuala Lumpur Badminton Stadium in Cheras on Saturday.
This time it was not Fong Ying, but younger sister Fong Wei who made the podium in women’s gunshu (stick), earning 9.62 points to finish third behind China’s Shaoyi Zheng (9.72) and Hong Kong’s Geng Xiao Ling (9.65).
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Friday, October 11, 2013

Exhausted shuttlers limp out of East Asian Games


Hong Kong's exhausted badminton players bowed out limply from the East Asian Games yesterday, having expended all their energy to win a silver medal in the team event.

Playing his ninth game in four days, Wong Wing-ki went out in the individual quarter-finals when he was beaten by Kazumasa Sakai of Japan in three games after a gruelling 73-minute battle.

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Monday, May 30, 2011

Indians welcome shelved badminton ruling

Saina Nehwal of India plays a shot during the Badminton women's singles at the Asian Games in Guangzhou in 2010. Indian badminton players and officials welcomed a decision by the sport's bosses to shelve a controversial new ruling that would have forced women to wear skirts or dresses on court.
Saina Nehwal of India plays a shot during the Badminton women's singles at the Asian Games in Guangzhou in 2010. Indian badminton players and officials welcomed a decision by the sport's bosses to shelve a controversial new ruling that would have forced women to wear skirts or dresses on court.

AFP - Indian badminton players and officials on Monday welcomed a decision by the sport's bosses to shelve a controversial new ruling that would have forced women to wear skirts or dresses on court.
The new regulation, which sparked the worst internal wrangling in years and saw badminton gain unprecedented media coverage, had already been delayed once but had been due to come into effect on June 1.
The sport's governing body, the Badminton World Federation (BWF), met Saturday in the Chinese coastal city of Qingdao and decided to shelve the ruling pending a new dress code proposal in December.
"It is a very good decision by the BWF. They couldn't have gone ahead with the mandatory skirt ruling anyways," India's top women's doubles player Jwala Gutta was quoted as saying by the Press Trust of India news agency.
"It can never be a compulsion on the players and it is good that they are rethinking the decision."
Badminton Association of India (BAI) vice-president T.P.S. Puri also welcomed the decision, which will allow players to continue wearing shorts during games.
"This is the right approach by the BWF. If it would have been made compulsory then many players would have become uncomfortable," he said.
"A lot of nations, including India, objected to the mandatory nature of the ruling and we welcome this decision of the governing body."
Some players had accused the game's administrators of sexism, but badminton bosses countered that they were merely trying to boost the profile of the women's game and help attract more sponsorship.
China, Indonesia and India were among a host of countries which had raised fierce objections, while in Malaysia, the opposition Pan-Malaysia Islamic Party (PAS) called for a boycott of tournaments.
Despite rapid modernisation, India remains a generally conservative country where public displays of sexuality are taboo and women are expected to dress modestly.
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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Saina commences campaign for Asian Games medal on Wednesday Read more: Saina commences campaign for Asian Games medal on Wednesday - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/16th-asian-games-2010/india-news/Saina-commences-campaign-for-Asian-Games-medal-on-Wednesday/articleshow/6933866.cms#ixzz15bmk5qfP

Saina
GUANGZHOU: India's best bet for a badminton medal at the Asian Games, Saina Nehwal, starts her campaign in the individual competitions at the Tianhe Gymnasium on Wednesday.

The 20-year-old was the lone player to win her match in India's first-round defeat to Chinese Taipei in the team competition earlier and would be eager to break the medal drought in her individual capacity.

Seeded second behind world number one Wang Xin of China, the Hyderabad star is all primed after her campaign in the team event to make a determined push to the medal podium.

Saina, who came here after winning the women's singles crown at last month's Commonwealth Games, is not going to have it easy here.

Given a first round bye she has to play her second round tie tomorrow against the winner of the match between Malaysia's Lydia Cheah and Vietnam's Thi Trang Vu, which is expected to be easy.

She is later set to meet sixth seed Yip Pui Yin of Hong Kong, the world number 12, which could be a very tricky encounter.

They have a 1-1 head-to-head record with Saina winning their previous encounter in October 2009 in the Yonex French Super Series in half an hour after having lost to the same Taipei girl in 2007, when she was still finding her feet at the international arena, in the Swiss Open.

A potential and very tough match-up with third seed Wang Shixian of China awaits the Indian shuttler in the semifinal.

It was the Chinese player who upset Saina's plans in the last world championship in August beating her in the tournament in which Saina was seeded second.

If the Indian avenges her defeat to the Chinese world number four, Saina will have a potential shot at the gold against top seed and title-favourite Wang Xin who has fourth seed Eriko Hirose to contend with in her half of the draw.

Aditi Mutatkar is also in the women's singles fray while in men's singles world number 43 Arvind Bhat has an easy opening round encounter tomorrow against Sri Lanka's Niluka Karunaratne.

A victory there would pilot him to a likely contest against sixth seed Ponsana Boonsak of Thailand, ranked sixth in the world.

P Kashyap, ranked 26 globally, has a tougher initial draw and is to face fifth seed Nguyen Tien Minh, ranked eighth in the world, tomorrow.

Malaysian world number one Chong Wei Lee is the top seed while Beijing Olympic champion and three-time world champion Lin Dan, the world number four, is the number two seed.

Former World and Olympic champion and fourth seed Taufik Hidayat, 29, is in the Chinese star's half of the draw, making it a truly world class event.



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Saturday, November 13, 2010

Asian Games: World's best enjoy contrasting fortunes















GUANGZHOU, China - World number one Lee Chong Wei got his Asian Games off to the worst possible start on Saturday by suffering a shock defeat, but it was plain sailing for arch-rival Lin Dan.

Lee, who admits he is not fully fit after an ankle injury, lost to Thailand's world number six Boonsak Ponsana in three sets in the quarter-finals of the men's team event in Guangzhou.

The surprise 21-9, 10-21, 19-21 defeat only heightens fears that the 28-year-old Malaysian's Games could be ruined by injury.

"We felt bad after Lee's loss," said Koo Kien Keat, who together with Tan Boon Heong defeated Thailand's Sudket Prapakamol and Songphon Anugritayawon.

"We knew that we had to work harder and focus on our own game because if we couldn't win, we'd lose the chance to advance to the next round."

There was no such drama for China's Lin, widely regarded as the best player ever, who strolled to a 21-15, 21-17 victory over Hong Kong's Hu Yun in the team quarters.

"It was my first match and the first game is never easy," said Lin, who has won every major title except an Asian Games singles gold.

"I believe I can get into better condition in the upcoming matches," added the 27-year-old, who has been trying to play down expectations that he will steamroller to the gold -- particularly if his main rival is struggling.

The Chinese have enjoyed another hugely successful year on the badminton circuit and some expect them to perform an Asian Games clean-sweep.

"All the men's teams participating in the event are very strong," insisted Lin after China marched into the semi-finals.

"There are no big differences in playing ability between us and the other teams. I think we will have quite a tough journey."

In the women's team event, India's world number three Saina Nehwal powered to a winning start, beating Indonesia's Adriyanti Firdasari.

Nehwal, who captured gold in the pressure-cooker atmosphere of her home Commonwealth Games in New Delhi last month, won her match 21-16, 21-17, but it was not enough to prevent India going down 3-2 overall.

"I don't want to think much about it," said the 20-year-old from Hyderabad, looking ahead to the singles action, where she is one of the favourites to take gold.

"I just want to take one game at a time and do my best."

Nehwal was the first Indian woman to win a Super Series title and the first ever to climb as high as she has in the world.

- AFP/ir

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Thursday, October 28, 2010

Liew strengthens position in Guangzhou Asian Games

ODENSE: Malaysia’s Liew Daren has put himself in a good position to be considered to play in the third singles slot in the men’s team competition at the Guangzhou Asian Games.
In the Denmark Open at the Odense Sports Park yesterday, Daren came back from a game down to beat a higher ranked Dicky Palyama of Holland 19-21, 21-14, 21-10 in a 53-minute first-round match.
But the 23-year-old, who came through from the qualifying tournament, is not thinking about the prospects on getting to play in the Asiad.
“I am delighted to be included in the team for the Asian Games but I still want to make a strong impression in convincing the selectors on my ability to play well,” said Daren, who was a semi-finalist in the recent Indonesia Open Grand Prix Gold tournament.
Going strong: Liew Daren defeated Holland’s Dicky Palyama 19-21, 21-14, 21-10 yesterday to qualify for the last 16 of the Denmark Open.
“I will leave it to them to decide on the best strategy for the team. I am comfortable playing with the underdog tag without the unnecessary pressure.”
In the match against Palyama, Daren admitted that he committed several errors towards the closing stage of the first game and allowed his world No. 21 opponent to win it.
“I cut my right palm in going down to retrieve a shot in the second round qualifying match against Wang Zhengming (which he won 21-16, 11-21, 21-18 on Tuesday) and I did not want to use it as an excuse for not playing well,” said Daren, who is ranked 89th in the world.
“I felt that I had a chance to keep my hopes alive and continue my journey in the tournament. I just pulled my socks up and I did not want to repeat the same mistakes in following two games against Palyama.”
Daren will be play against the winner of the match between Hong Kong’s Hu Yun and India’s Anand Chetan for a place in the quarter-finals.
Daren said he is eager to reverse the outcome against the challenger coming through.
“In the past, I have lost to both of them on two occasions each. Both matches against Chetan went down to the wire in three games while the last meeting with Hu Yun was also decided over rubber games. It will be a refreshing change to score a win tomorrow (today),” Daren recalled.
The other Malaysian in the men’s singles competition, Chan Kwong Beng, who is also in the team for the Asian Games, failed to get past the qualifying rounds. He was beaten 11-21, 14-21 by Denmark’s Emil Vind in a second-round match.
In the men’s doubles, the newly-forged partnership of Mohd Fairuzizuan Tazari-Ong Soon Hock got off to a winning start, beating Taiwanese Chen Chung Jen-Lin Yen Jui 21-12, 21-10 in 23 minutes.
Meanwhile, top seeded Dane and 2008 champion Peter Gade Christensen has opted to withdraw from the tournament because a lower back injury.
“The injury has restricted my movement and it is wise not to risk aggravating it,” he said.
“I will leave for home tomorrow and continue to seek treatment. Hopefully, I will be ready for the next tournament (French Open) next week.”
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Tuesday, October 26, 2010

World number one back in training ahead of Asian Games

Lee Chong Wei of Malaysia playing in the Beiji...Image via Wikipedia





KUALA LUMPUR: Badminton world number one Lee Chong Wei's hopes of competing in next month's Asian Games were boosted on Friday when the Malaysian returned to training after an ankle injury.

Lee injured his ankle in the successful defence of his Commonwealth Games title in New Delhi earlier this month and underwent an MRI scan to assess the damage sustained in the gold medal match.

"He will start with a light workout... and he will be monitored closely by the NSI (National Sports Institute)," Badminton Association of Malaysia (BAM) general manager Kenny Goh said in Friday's edition of the Malaysian Star.

"We will be able to get a full report on his status from the NSI after this."

Lee is top seed for the Asian Games which takes place in Guangzhou, China, from November 12 to 27.

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Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Badminton World number one a doubt for Asian Games

World number one Lee Chong Wei is a doubt for next month's Asian Games badminton event with an ankle injury, the latest in a list of niggling ailments.
The Malaysian two-times Commonwealth Games champion is to undergo an MRI scan to determine the extent of the injury.
Badminton World number one a doubt for Asian Games

"He complained of pain ... on Saturday (after his return from New Delhi). I had a look at it on Sunday and we are now investigating the injury," Malaysia's National Sports Institute director Ramlan Aziz told Malaysia's Star newspaper.
"According to Chong Wei, he felt pain during the final match at the Commonwealth Games.
"We will not be able to make any conclusion on his preparation for the Asian Games, not until we are able to review all the reports following the treatment he gets over the next few days."
The Asian Games takes place in Guangzhou, China, from November 12 to 27, 2010. Lee is in the opposite half of the draw from his nemesis Lin Dan of China and champion Taufik Hidayat of Indonesia.
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Asian Games Badminton Draws Announced, Saina Nehwal Gets An Easy One

With the Asian Games to start on November 12th in Guangzhou, China, the Badminton draws were declared yesterday with Saina Nehwal getting a comparatively easy draw. Indian Badminton sensation Saina Nehwal has been in tremendous form and holds the World No. 3 ranking. She won a Gold medal at recently concluded Commonwealth Games and is seeded second at the Asian Games.
Saina Cwg

Due to the current form, Saina has been given a bye in the first round however she might face the sixth seeded Hong Kong shuttler Pui Yin Yip in the second round. The other Singles player Aditi Mutatkar will meet Sri Lankan Thilini Jayasinghe in the first round and is expected to set up a clash with fourth seeded Eriko Hirose of Japan in the second round.
In Men's Singles, Indian Shuttler and the CWG Bronze medal winner Parupalli Kashyap will meet World no. 9 Tien Minh Nguyen of Vietnam in the first round. The other Singles player, Chetan Anand, has a face-off with Sri Lankan player Niluka Karunaratne.
The Men's doubles pair of Rupesh Kumar and Sanave Thomas will be meeting top seeded Malaysian pair of Kien Keat Koo and Boon Heong Tan. The CWG Gold medalist Women's double pair of Jwala Gutta and Ashwini Ponnappa will meet with Thailand pair of Savitree Amitrapai and P. Munkitchokecharoen in the first round before a likely clash with second seeded Chinese pair.
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Thursday, July 15, 2010

Saina zooms to career-best second in badminton rankings

New Delhi:  Ace Indian shuttler Saina Nehwal is just a step away from realising her goal of becoming the world's numero uno player as she jumped one place to a career-best second in the latest international rankings.

"I am very happy to achieve the world number two so soon in my career. The last three wins have really helped me. It is a great feeling but I feel my priority still will be to win more tournaments for India rather than focussing on ranking," Saina said.

"It will be difficult to hold on to the ranking but I hope to continue my hard work and win more titles and become the number one player soon," said the Hyderabadi shuttler, who is down with fever and cold.

The 20-year-old Saina made a meteoric rise following her back-to-back title triumphs at the India Open Grand Prix and the Singapore Open Super Series, reaching the world number three last month.

And after the Indian defended her Indonesian Open Super Series crown to complete her hat-trict of titles, it was just a matter of time that she jumped to the second place.

By virtue of the consecutive title wins, Saina now has 64791.2637 points and is just behind Chinese Yihan Wang, while Xin Wang of China is in the third place.

Saina's father Harvir Singh also expressed happiness and hoped her daughter can continue her good work for the country.

"God has been kind. It is a marvellous achievement. I hope she can continue to work hard and win more laurels for the country," Harvir Singh said.

In March, Saina had attained the fifth position after becoming the first Indian woman to reach the semifinals of the prestigious All England Super Series Championships.

However, she dropped to the sixth position in the subsequent weeks.

Saina's next engagement will be in the World badminton Championship in Paris next month, before playing the Commonwealth Games and Asian Games.

In the men's ranking, the Indian trio of Chetan Anand, P Kashyap and Arvind Bhatt were at 15th, 25th and 27th spot respectively, while mixed doubles pair of Jwala Gutta and V Diju were static at the seventh place.

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Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Chong Wei says it’s important to perform well in Majors

PETALING JAYA: World No. 1 Lee Chong Wei will be out to win the Macau Open to inch closer to achieving a career season’s best.
Chong Wei is the defending champion in the tournament scheduled for July 27-Aug 1 and the absence of the top players from China has brighten his chance to add a sixth international Open title to his belt.
Chong Wei: ‘Setting records are small goals.’
He retained the Malaysian Open Grand Prix Gold title last Sunday in Johor Baru. Chong Wei also emerged as the champion in four Super Series tournaments – in Malaysia, South Korea, England and Indonesia.
Chong Wei’s career season’s best is seven titles, which he achieved it last year.
But Chong Wei said that he would not be distracted from his tasks in three remaining major assignments this year – the world championships in Paris next month, the Commonwealth Games in New Delhi in October and the Asian Games in Guangzhou in November.
“There is another half year to go and chances to win more titles. I will do my best to retain the Macau Open title,” he said.
“Setting records are small goals. It is more important for me to do well in the world championships, Commonwealth Games and the Asiad.”
The hope is on Chong Wei to become the Malaysian to win a world championship title. He had under-achieved in the last two editions in 2007 (Kuala Lumpur) and 2009 (Hyderabad).
In the Macau Open, Chong Wei’s main challengers will be second seed Peter-Gade Christensen of Denmark and third seed Sony Dwi Kuncoro of Indonesia.
Chong Wei is not in the same half of the draw a Sony, who defeated him in the quarter-finals of the Singapore Open.
He has in his half a handful aspiring youngsters – Kenichi Tago (Japan), P. Kashyap (India), Dionysius Hayom Rumbaka (Indonesia) and Shon Wan-ho (South Korea). Also in the half are two seasoned campaigners – Indonesia’s Simon Santoso and Hong Kong’s Hu Yun.
The other half with Christensen and Sony are Thailand’s Boonsak Ponsana, Taiwan’s Hsieh Yu-hsing and two Malaysians Mohd Hafiz Hashim and Wong Choong Hann.
Malaysia also have back-up shuttlers in the fray. But Chan Kwong Beng, Mohd Arif Abdul Latif, Liew Daren and Tan Chun Seang are not expected to make much headway based on their current form.
In the men’s doubles, Koo Kien Keat-Tan Boon Heong will not be gunning for the title for a fourth time. Malaysia have three back-up pairs in the fray – Mak Hee Chun-Tan Wee Kiong, Chan Peng Soon-Lim Khim Wah and Goh Wei Shem-Teo Kok Siang.
Mohd Fairuzizuan Mohd Tazari has served out a one-month suspension for losing his cool during the Thomas Cup Finals in May and will make a return to competition with Mohd Zakry Abdul Latif. Also carrying the challenges for Malaysia are independent pairs Chan Chong Ming-Chew Choon Eng, Gan Teik Chai-Tan Bin Shen and Choong Tan Fook-Lee Wan Wah.
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KOREA - Samsung seeks gold in the Deep South

Friday, 09 July 2010 09:42
With the national badminton team spending July at home, two domestic teams have crossed oceans this week to give their players some Grand Prix action.  But while the Korea National University of Sports takes on a world class field in Canada, veteran Lee Kyung Won (pictured) leads the Samsung Electromechanics team as they head way Down Under to strut their stuff in Melbourne at the Yonex Australia Open Grand Prix.  The team spoke to Badzine during their last training session before their departure for Australia.

By Don Hearn, Badzine Korea correspondent. Photos: Badmintonphoto (archives) and Don Hearn

Samsung Electromechanics has long been Korea’s premier pro badminton team.  The team was founded in 1996 and all but one of Korea’s Olympic gold medallists and three more silver medallists since then have been Samsung players.  Every member of the coaching staff is either a former national team coach, an Olympic gold medallist, or both.  Next week, the entire Samsung team, minus Paris-bound Lee Yong Dae and Lee Hyo Jung, will be in action in Australia.

Current national team members Lee Kyung Won, Cho Gun Woo, Kim Min Seo, and Kang Hae Won will be joined by eight Samsung teammates, including Athens Olympians Park Tae Sang and Seo Yoon Hee, and former national champion Hwang Hye Youn.

The Koreans’ best hopes are for Lee Kyung Won, in her first international appearance since clinching the winning point in Korea’s Uber Cup final victory, and Cho Gun Woo, who was crowned Asian Champion in April and who just two weeks ago reached his first Super Series final, in Indonesia.  But the thirty-year-old Lee and the 21-year-old Cho are both rather new to the role of being the veteran partner having to provide the anchor of experience.

Cho Gun Woo (pictured) was born 12 days before Lee Yong Dae, his long-time partner and classmate since elementary school, but by the time they played their last junior event together in 2006, Lee had already spent 4 years on the national team while Cho was just getting started.  Since graduating to the senior circuit in 2007, Cho has partnered veterans like Han Sang Hoon, Yoo Yeon Seong, Kang Myeong Won and now Kwon Yi Goo.

“Next week, I’ll be playing with Kim Dong Min and since it’s his first international tournament, it will be very different.  We expect to meet the top Malaysian pair in the quarter-finals and we’ll do our best to come up with a good result,” said Cho.

Cho insists on being realistic about his recent success.  “It isn’t that I have improved so much.  In Indonesia and India, we didn’t have to face any of the very top pairs.  The pairs we beat were all between the world’s #8 and #15.  Had we had to play top 5 pairs, the results would no doubt have been very different.”


When the nation calls...

Like his former Samsung teammates Jung Jae Sung and Han Sang Hoon, Cho has apparently been called for military service, which would put him in uniform throughout the two-year run-up to the London Olympics but from which only an Asian Games gold medal could exempt him.

“I’m trying not to think about that and to just concentrate on my playing for now,” says Cho.  “It might be true that the Asian Games could change things but we have a lot of good players and the competition will be stiff to even make the team for Guangzhou.  That is still a goal, though, and right now, [Kwon] Yi Goo and I will be concentrating on trying to improve and to boost our ranking with good results in Macau and Taiwan this summer.

“My game still needs improvement in the same areas as always.  I still don’t move fast enough to play against the top men’s doubles pairs and I also need to work on my net play.  My defensive play is good but my net play needs work so that’s something that I’m improving little by little.”

Samsung head coach Kwon Seung Taik explained “The players are really looking forward to playing in Australia, especially those who aren’t on the national team and only get to compete in a few domestic tournaments each year.

“But it’s good for the national team players too.  In Super Series events, it’s very difficult to advance past qualifying or past the early rounds and it can be demoralizing.  If they can go to a smaller tournament like this and do well or maybe even win, it gives them confidence and motivates them to keep improving to do well in the major tournaments.

“Plus, they are more likely to get more match experience, unlike the Super Series, where sometimes they might play a strong opponent in the first round or in qualifying and then have to go home having only played once.”

While excursions like this one may be reminiscent of efforts by the Djarum team in Indonesia or the KLRC in Malaysia to give tournament experience to players outside the national team, Kwon explained that it was a very different paradigm in Korea.

“Many of our players are also on the national team and we need to get permission from the Badminton Korea Association to take our players to a tournament like this.  Also, we have to select a tournament that the national team isn’t already sending players to and find a time in the tournament schedule where all of our players have time to train together to prepare.  All that means that this can’t happen more than once a year.”

Two players who are looking forward to the Australia Open are former singles headliners Seo Yoon Hee and Hwang Hye Youn.  Hwang (pictured) is a two-time national champion who has won bronze in the Asian Games and the All England but she injured her foot last October and was finally dropped from the national team in early February when it turned out that her recovery would involve her leg going back into a cast for another month.  Hwang has not competed internationally or nationally yet this year but in training, she showed no mobility problems whatsoever as she floated around the court, chasing down backhand after backhand and schooling veteran Park Tae Sang with her precision placement.


No comeback, but still something to prove

But if Hwang has slipped into obscurity with the success, during her absence this year, of Sung Ji Hyun, Bae Youn Joo, and Bae Seung Hee, team-mate Seo Yoon Hee has been all but forgotten beyond Korea's shores.  Seo was once a dangerous international competitor who was capable of taking down such aces as Pi Hongyan and Wang Chen.  She left the national team in 2007 and has not competed overseas since. However, despite being on a roll in domestic events recently - losing to Bae Youn Joo in the nationals last December and winning the Summer Championship title last month – Seo insists that we will not see her make a comeback as Bae Seung Hee did two years ago.

“Life is much more enjoyable now that I am just playing with my team.  like it here, explains Seo, watching her teammates train beneath banners covered in caricatures of all of the players, hung their partly for the benefit of a recreational club / cheering squad that uses the gym in the evenings.  “I can relax and enjoy playing.  When I was on the national team, it was very stressful.  There was a lot of pressure to do well in international tournaments.

“I’m actually in top condition now,” says Seo, who still has her goals, even on the domestic circuit.  In fact, Seo’s runner-up finish at the nationals in December was her fourth time coming up short she watched a third straight national champion climb past her up the podium.  “I’ve been close many times but never won the nationals so I’d really like to finally win it.

“Next week, I’m just going to do my best and I hope to have a good result.”


Lee’s Career to end in Guangzhou

If the Australia Open will see young Cho Gun Woo dabbling in big-brotherhood for a week, Lee Kyung Won’s recent transformation is both different and more important.  Ten years ago, Lee Kyung Won was in the top ten as a women’s singles player and before the first year of the new millennium was out, she would play in the semi-finals of three major tournaments and take the national singles title.  Starting in 2001, however, she became the new doubles partner of the great Ra Kyung Min, who at that time had already collected an All England title and silver medals at the Asian Games and the World Championships all in women’s doubles.

“I was had so much to learn from Kyung Min from 2001 until the Athens Olympics, where we won the bronze medal,” said Lee.  “She really helped me a lot.  Then in 2005, I started playing with Lee Hyo Jung and by that time, I had improved a lot and we had a successful partnership.

Next week, Lee will be paired with Kim Min Seo (who recently changed her name from Kim Mi Young).  Kim (pictured with Lee) is 23, like Lee’s more regular partner this year, Ha Jung Eun.  Perhaps surprisingly for such a seasoned veteran, this is Lee’s first year as a veteran mentor and nowhere was this more important than in the Uber Cup finals.

“We were so surprised when we won the Uber Cup this year,” said Lee.  “Of course, we always had a chance in each of my five times playing in the Uber Cup, this time I was the oldest member of the team and winning the Cup was an important milestone in Korean badminton history that everyone was looking forward to.

“Hyo Jung and I had beaten Chinese pairs before but the other girls hadn’t and they were always so nervous when they played the Chinese so it was really important for us to show them the way, to give them the taste of winning.

“For me and my career, the Asian Games will be the end.  Rather than the individual event, I see my role as being to once again lead the younger players.  I don’t even know who I’ll be playing women’s doubles with.  It’s getting harder as I’m not so young anymore and there are a lot of good younger players coming up to make room for.

“I’ve already won gold at the Asian Games and I feel I’ve been so lucky to have partnered such top players as Ra Kyung Min and Lee Hyo Jung.  They really are two of the world’s best players.

Asked how much she would regret retiring without Olympic gold, Lee responds “It was hard to settle for silver in the Olympics because I injured my ankle in the final and at that point, we didn’t know whether we could still have won it.  But this Uber Cup victory is really a big deal. Especially beating Du Jing and Yu Yang in the last match - since that’s who beat us in the Olympics – that really helps to ease the regret from Beijing.  The Olympics was two years ago and the Uber Cup is a high note on which to end my career so it gives me great happiness.

“I was very disappointed that the Uber Cup wasn’t televised.  It was a historic win and we didn’t know ourselves if we would be able to beat China in the final.  I understand it from the TV stations’ perspective but it is still disappointing.”

Lee Kyung Won is known for her exuberance on court but this is not restricted to major championships.  In training with her Samsung team-mates, she is just as keen to win and shouts encouragement to her partner while fighting for every point.

“Next week in Australia, we’re again doing this for the good of the team so we’re going to play hard and give it our best shot,” says Lee.  And we know that on that count we can take her at her word.



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Monday, July 12, 2010

Pei Tty opts out of team to Guangzhou Asiad

PETALING JAYA: Doubles shuttler Wong Pei Tty dropped a bombshell yesterday when she opted out of the team for the Guangzhou Asian Games in November.
Pei Tty was left frustrated yesterday when a nagging knee injury prevented her from complementing Chin Eei Hui well and it resulted in a shock first-round defeat in the Malaysian Open Grand Prix Gold at Stadium Bandaraya in Johor Baru.
The top seeds were beaten 23-25, 12-21 by Indonesian scratch pair Melati Nadya-Vita Marissa, who are now independent players.
Early casualties: Wong Pei Tty (left) and Chin Eei Hui went down 23-25, 12-21 to Indonesian scratch pair Melati Nadya-Vita Marissa yesterday.
National doubles chief coach Rexy Mainaky agreed with Pei Tty’s decision to skip the Asian Games before commending the top pair’s fighting spirit on court.
“Pei Tty had been burdened with knee injury for some time but yesterday, it showed in her game. She was slow to retrieve the shuttle and was cautious in her game,” he said.
“Despite the pain, she still tried her best. Our players did give a good fight before bowing out. I always admire Pei Tty’s fighting spirit but her physical condition was a problem.
“She has finally decided to go for surgery after the Commonwealth Games (in New Delhi in October). If she does that, she will have to miss the Asiad.
“The Asian Games competition is very stiff and it will be difficult for her and Eei Hui to challenge top players from China and South Korea. It is best that she skips the Asiad and concentrate on qualifying for the Olympics (in London in 2012).”
Rexy will also monitor Pei Tty’s condition ahead of the world championships, which will be held in Paris from Aug 23-29.
“We will see how she fares in training. For now, Pei Tty’s and Eei Hui’s main focus is on winning honours at the Commonwealth Games where the competition will not be too strenuous on them,” he said.
With the exit of Pei Tty-Eei Hui in the GP Gold tournament, Malaysia can only bank on the Ng sisters, Hui Lin-Hui Ern, to carry the challenge. They are the only Malaysian pair to reach the quarter-finals and will take on Hong Kong’s Chan Tsz Ka-Chau Hoi Wah.
Malaysia’s challenge in the women’s singles have been reduced to two players with Wong Mew Choo and Tee Jing Yi playing against Hong Kong’s Tsz Ka and Yip Pui Yin respectively for places in the semi-finals.
Meanwhile, there were several close calls in the men’s competition with Tan Chun Seang and Ong Soon Hock-Hoon Thien How almost turning the tables on Indonesia’s top players in the singles and doubles events respectively.
Back-up shuttler Chun Seang went down 21-23, 20-22 to Taufik Hidayat in the third round while Soon Hock-Thien How let slip a good chance for the biggest upset of the day when they went down 19-21, 21-19, 20-22 to former Olympic champions Markis Kido-Hendra Setiawan.
Malaysia have Lee Chong Wei, Mohd Hafiz Hashim and Wong Choong Hann through to the quarter-finals.
Chong Wei will take on Indonesian Andre Kurniawan Tedjono, who blew away Chong Wei Feng yesterday, while Hafiz meets Choong Hann for a place in the semi-final.
Malaysia are also assured of a place in the men’s doubles semi-finals when top seeds Koo Kien Keat-Tan Boon Heong set up a quarter-final match against Mak H
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ee Chun-Tan Wee Kiong, who eliminated compatriots Chan Peng Soon-Lim Khim Wah.
Independent pair of Gan Teik Chai-Tan Bin Shen will also see action in the last eight today against Indonesians Alven Yulianto-Hendra Gunawan.
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Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Key to the Asiad

PETALING JAYA: Back-up men’s pairs Mak Hee Chun-Tan Wee Kiong and Chan Peng Soon-Lim Khim Wah have been given another shot to make the grade to play in their first major badminton tournament after muffing up the chance once this year.
One of them could make it to the squad for the Guangzhou Asian Games in November if they can produce consistently good results in three Open tournaments, beginning with the Malaysian Open Grand Prix Gold, which starts today in Johor Baru.
The two pairs will also feature in the Macau Open (July 27 - Aug 1) and Taiwan Open (Aug 3 - Aug 8).
Time’s up: Mak Hee Chun and Tan Wee Kiong have been another shot to make the grade.
Hee Chun-Wee Kiong and Peng Soon-Khim Wah were in the running for places in the team for the Thomas Cup Finals in May but fell out of favour because of the lack of outstanding results when it mattered most.
National doubles coach Tan Kim Her said that the race was open for the second doubles slot in the team for the Asian Games.
Currently, only world No. 1 Koo Kien Keat-Tan Boon Heong are assured of places in the team.
Besides Hee Chun-Wee Kiong and Peng Soon-Khim Wah, the others in contention for places are Hoon Thien How-Ong Soon Hock and Mohd Fairuzizuan Mohd Tazari-Mohd Zakry Abdul Latif.
Except for Fairuzizuan and Zakry, all the others are taking part in the Malaysian GP Gold. Fairuzizuan-Zakry will only have one stage impress the coaches – in the Macau Open.
Kim Her added that the panel of coaches would be able to decide on the second pair for the Asiad after the three back-to-back Open tournaments.
“They say opportunity does not knock on the door twice but our back-up shuttlers have been presented the chance to impress the coaches for consideration in the team for the Asian Games. We hope that they do not buckle under pressure again,” he said.
Peng Soon-Khim Wah did well to win their first international title when they defeated Choong Tan Fook-Lee Wan Wah at the Thailand Open last year but the duo had not been able to their game to a higher level even though they showed great commitment in training.
“We are not looking at one-hit wonders. We want to see steady performances from them in all three tournaments – in Johor Baru, Macau and Taiwan,” said Kim Her.
However, the draw in the Malaysian GP Gold is not kind to Hee Chun-Wee Kiong and Peng Soon-Khim Wah, who will take on each other in the second round if they beat Japanese Kawamae Naoki-Shoji Sato and Indonesians Wardana Tri Kusuma-Wijaya Komang Sandy respectively.
They are in the same half as defending champions Kien Keat-Boon Heong, world junior champions Ow Yao Han-Yew Hong Kheng, Mohd Razif Abdul Latif-Ong Jian Guo and Gan Teik Chai-Tan Bin Shen.
In the other half with former world and Olympic champions Markis Kido-Hendra Setiawan of Indonesia are Hong Kong’s Yohan Hadikusumo Wiratama-Wong Wai Hong, Indonesia’s Luluk Hadiyanto-Candra Wijaya, Japan’s Hiroyuki-Hayakawa Kenichi and Malaysia’s Choong Tan Fook-Lee Wan Wah and Soon Hock-Thien How.
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Thursday, July 1, 2010

Make way for the ladies

Saina Nehwal’s rise to the top of the world badminton rankings is yet another landmark in the history of women in Indian sports and comes on the 40th anniversary of their first significant international achievement.
It was at the 1970 Asian Games in Bangkok that Kanwaljit Sandhu won the first international gold medal for an Indian sportswoman in the 400 metres. This was followed by the PT Usha era of the 1980s while this decade saw the emergence of Sania Mirza and world amateur boxing champion MC Mary Kom.
It was an uphill struggle for sportswomen from the time of Independence till the 60s, with just a handful of sports like tennis, badminton, table tennis, athletics and hockey open to them.
The tiny Parsi and Anglo-Indian communities led the way in those early years and it was in the matter of clothing that sportswomen in India saw their progress stifled. A girl seen in public in shorts or skirts was considered scandalous and it was a common sight to see them competing in salwar-kameez and even saris.
Among the early stars were Roshan Mistry (a Parsi), 100m silver medalist in the first Asian Games in Delhi in 1951; and Stephie D’Souza, the first woman to receive the Arjuna Award in 1963. D’Souza was part of the relay team that won gold in the 4x100m at the 1954 Asian Games and also represented India in hockey. Geeta Zutshi also struck gold in the 800m  in the 1978 Asian Games. But by now the Kerala era in women’s athletics was beginning to unfold. This was thanks to the sports hostel concept in the state, under which the government funded the education and training of promising young athletes.
When the Asian Games returned to New Delhi in 1982, M.D. Valsamma was one of the stars with her gold in the 400m hurdles. The Indian women’s hockey team also made up for the ignominy suffered by the men who were trounced 7-1 in the final by Pakistan. Angel Mary Joseph, Valsamma, Usha and Shiny Abraham were at the forefront of the Kerala surge while Karnataka produced the first glamour girls of Indian sport in Ashwini Nachappa, Reeth Abraham and Vandana Rao. This trio could not match the medal-winning feats of their Kerala counterparts but captured the media glare with their good looks and daring outfits.
Usha won silver in the 100m and 200m in 1982. For the rest of the decade there was no one to challenge her supremacy in Asia. But Usha’s greatest,   and saddest, moment came at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics when she became the first Indian woman to reach an Olympics track and field final in the 400m hurdles, but was edged into fourth place.
Since then only Anju Bobby George has matched Usha’s feat when she reached the final of the women’s long jump in the 2004 Olympics, having won silver in the world championship at Paris the previous year. That remains the lone medal won by an Indian athlete — male or female — at the world event.
By 1986 Usha was unstoppable. The Seoul Asian Games were an all-time low for Indian sport as they brought India just five gold medals. Four were Usha’s, and the fifth was won in kabaddi.
The rapid strides taken by women on the sports field saw them shift their focus, from the 1990s onwards, to the traditionally masculine preserves of weightlifting, boxing and wrestling. Karnam Malleswari and Kunjarani Devi bagged international weightlifting medals galore and when Malleswari won the bronze in the 69kg division at the Sydney Olympics, she set yet another landmark — the first Olympic medal for an Indian woman.
Sania Mirza burst onto the scene spectacularly in 2005 by rising in the world tennis rankings while at the same time turning heads and raising eyebrows. She broke down barriers of gender and religion and had the world media turning its attention to India. Her glam appeal meant that endorsement deals for the Hyderabadi heartthrob were now rivaling those of India’s top cricketers.
But the shift from the sports pages to front page news, and then to the glamour of Page 3 — combined with injuries and various controversies — saw Mirza lose focus, rankings and popularity. Today she has been reduced to an also-ran on the world tennis circuit. Her comet-like career has sent warning signs to Saina who, no doubt, has learnt some important life lessons from her fellow-Hyderabadi’s sudden rise and equally rapid fall.
In sports as varied as archery, shooting, chess — Koneru Humpy is ranked world number two — to boxing, where M.C. Mary Kom is the four-time amateur world champion in the 46 kg category, women have made impressive strides since Kanwaljit Sandhu’s breakthrough feat four decades ago.
Today, thanks to the courageous pioneers who defied the oppressive constraints of a patriarchal society, the sky is the limit for women’s sports in India. The forthcoming Commonwealth Games in New Delhi and the 2012 Olympics in London should see this movement reach its pinnacle and bring more glory to Indian sports.
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Sunday, June 20, 2010

Singapore win women's doubles title at Singapore Open tournament



SINGAPORE : Singapore women's doubles pair Shinta Mulia Sari and Yao Lei on Sunday clinched the Republic's first-ever Singapore Open title in 20 years. 

The two beat South Korea's Lee Hyo Jung and Kim Min Jung 21-17, 22-20 in the final of the US$200,000 Li Ning Singapore Open 2010 Super Series. 

The pair, who won the India Open Grand Prix Gold title last weekend, got the 6,500-strong crowd at the Singapore Indoor Stadium on their feet, as they fought back from a 16-20 deficit in the second game, saving four match points to clinch the game and match for Team Singapore. 

Singapore's best performance in the tournament was in 2002, when Ronald Susilo bowed out 2-1 to Chen Hong of China in the men's singles final. 

Next up for the women's pair is next week's Indonesia Open Super Series, with the Commonwealth Games in New Delhi and Guangzhou Asian Games scheduled for October and November respectively. 

Earlier, Indonesia's Sony Dwi Kuncoro beat Thailand's Boonsak Ponsana on Sunday to lift his first Singapore Open title. 

Sony, the three-time Asian champion (2002, 2003, 2005), beat Ponsana 21-16, 21-16 in the final. 

The Indonesian upset world number one Lee Chong Wei of Malaysia in the quarterfinals and then beat India's Kashyap Parupalli 21-19, 21-19 in the semifinal to book his ticket to the final. 

Ponsana, the 2007 champion, came back from a set down to beat Peter Gade of 
Denmark 20-22, 21-17, 21-16 in the other semifinal to advance. 

India's Saina Nehwal, the top seed here and fresh from winning the Indian Open, beat Taipei's 16-year-old Tai Tzu Ying 21-18, 21-15 to clinch the women's title. 

The men's doubles title went to Taipei players Fang Chieh Min and Lee Sheng Mu who beat American pair Howard Bach and Tony Gunawan 21-14, 21-15. 

Denmark's Thomas Laybourn and Kamilla Rytter Juhl beat Indonesia's Nova Widianto and Liliyana Natsir 21-12, 21-15 to clinch the mixed doubles title. - CNA/ir/ms 
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