Badminton star Tai Tzu-ying confirms retirement: We lived to witness the fairytale era, watching the shuttle do tricks in a starry sky

Autumnal evenings don’t get more melancholy than the finality of the realisation that Tai Tzu-ying will never play a competitive badminton match again. Autumnal evenings don’t get merrier than knowing with certainty that no matter how abruptly it ends, we lived to witness the fairytale era when Tai Tzu-ying played badminton, watching the shuttle do tricks in a starry sky.

On Friday, the Taiwanese officially confirmed her retirement which had been on the cards for a while. “A beautiful chapter has come to an end. Thank you badminton for everything you have given me,” she wrote. Like a safe-haven asset in times of uncertain equity markets, Tai Tzu-ying’s two silvers – at Tokyo Olympics and the 2021 Worlds – could be pegged as her peaks.

But the mesmerising shuttler needed neither the Olympic gold nor a World Championship title to contend for the tag of the sport’s greatest artist of all time. Even her competitors would arrive at a quick consensus that no matter how many times they got the better of her, she could humble them, steal a wry grin out of them, and amaze them, with that one moment of wristy wizardry. Sending the shuttle into wavy fourth dimensions, she left them wrong-footed and wan-faced in the immediate aftermath, but glowing at the memory of that audacity forever afterward.

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In fact, show Roger Federer a couple of her playing clips, or a dozen, and the great man might have traded the thick graphite racquet frame for the lean one. Not many understood the dazzle of the disguises she dropped, a banger a minute, on some occasions. It was breathtaking and could turn every player and her diehard fans – hell bent on beating her – into Swiss neutrals, forgetting their nationalism and puny loyalties. She stuck her tongue out when the shuttle swayed wide, smiled on court, never argued with umpires, bowed to the court and seemed altogether oblivious to the magic she was capable of conjuring. But she knew her game was beautiful, she insisted that it stayed elegant and soulful, even if history pages hundred years from now might omit her from their chronicles.

Like a safe-haven asset in times of uncertain equity markets, Tai Tzu-ying's two silvers – at Tokyo Olympics and the 2021 Worlds – could be pegged as her peaks. (AP Photo) Like a safe-haven asset in times of uncertain equity markets, Tai Tzu-ying’s two silvers – at Tokyo Olympics and the 2021 Worlds – could be pegged as her peaks. (AP Photo)

A singularly talented shuttler, she was taught those tricks by half a dozen of her father’s friends who told the 5-foot-3 that she could perfect the skill to send the shuttle wherever she wished. In the early years, right up till her 2016 loss at Olympic pre-quarters to PV Sindhu, Tai could be bullied with power, and her impatience and inconsistency was always one shot away. But even as the headbangers Sindhu and Marin, and compulsive retriever and counter-puncher Akane Yamaguchi, could draw out the errors, the audience waited for snippets of sorcery. The reverse slices, the cross drops, the hairline thin net angles, the parabolic rally extenders, the zipping smashes – all needed her to get stronger, before she matched wins with bewitching skill. Her six-pack selfies happily sat alongside warm moments she spent with her grandmother, whom she called her best friend. Chen Yufei was absolutely spent by the time she wrested the gold for China away from her at Tokyo. And Sindhu played perhaps her greatest match tactically outlasting Tai at the Basel Worlds.

But fans waited for her to play. Simply play. Not necessarily win, though that was swell. Like Taufik Hidayat, perhaps even more than him, she turned this little-known sport into time-pausing illusions bought into by watching millions. At the 2018 Asian Games she finally won a glittering gold, though there were two All Englands, three Indonesia Opens, and two at Denmark amid 17 key titles to go with three Asian Championships.

Ratchanok Intanon, her contemporary, was perhaps in possession of an equally beautiful and intuitive game. But Tai had cheekiness, charming foibles and a carefree, unforced talent for making the champion look distinctly not the more popular of the two contenders. Only a sourpuss would ask her to furnish gold at the gates of greatness.

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It will be history’s wretched luck that generations in the future, will never know what it was like to watch Tai Tzu-ying play badminton. YouTube comes a distant second, because you won’t be barely breathing in that precise second, when neither you, nor Tai Tzu quite knew, where that shuttle would run. “I will enjoy a life without alarm clocks,” she explained. “The TTY era has come to an end. But I hope the spirit of TTY stays with you always.”

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Ee Wei stands by Tang Jie as injury clouds Hylo bid

PETALING JAYA: Mixed doubles shuttler Toh Ee Wei has backed partner Chen Tang Jie to make a quick recovery from a shoulder injury ahead of the Hylo Open starting on Tuesday in Saarbrucken, Germany.

Tang Jie was troubled by the shoulder problem and could not play at his best which ultimately led to the pair going down 9-21, 18-21 to Hong Kong’s Tang Chun Man-Tse Ying Suet in the French Open quarter-finals at the Glaz Arena in Cesson Sevigne yesterday.

Tang Jie suffered pain in his right shoulder before the match but he went on to play with Ee Wei.

The pair struggled badly in the first game before putting up a better fight in the second after the 27-year-old had some cold spray on the affected area.

It was not enough though to prevent the defeat in 37 minutes.

Despite fears over Tang Jie’s physical condition, Ee Wei is confident that her partner will be able to play in the Hylo Open.

“This (injury) is not a big problem for us. Sometimes, I’m injured too, so my partner will cover for me,” said Ee Wei in a post match interview with the Badminton World Federation (BWF).

“We chose to play and gave our best for every point. We just tried to get as many points as possible.

“This is the first time that our game was affected by the injury to Tang Jie. We need to learn from this and try again in the next tournament. We will keep going after this.”

Tang Jie said: “I was not at my best condition and that made the situation tougher for us.”

“Before entering the court, I could not lift up my hand but I played on, so there are no excuses for the defeat.

“This is the situation that I need to accept.

“I felt I needed to try my maximum effort. I felt sorry for my partner. We wanted to win. It was frustrating for her as well.”

It was Tang Jie-Ee Wei’s maiden defeat to world No. 8 Chun Man-Ying Suet after coming out on top in both their previous meetings.

It is the world No. 3’s first loss in the last eight since capturing the world crown in Paris in August.

Tang Jie-Ee Wei finished runners-up in the China Masters last month and made it into the last four in the Denmark Open last week.

Meanwhile, Malaysia’s challenge in the mixed doubles came to an end after world No. 9 independent pair Goh Soon Huat-Shevon Lai Jemie also lost 18-21, 16-21 to China’s world No. 2 Feng Yanzhe-Huang Dongping.

RESULTS

(Malaysians unless stated)

Quarter-finals

Women’s singles: Chen Yufei (Chn) bt Akane Yamaguchi (Jpn) 21-14, 16-21, 21-10; An Se-young (Kor) bt Gao Fangjie (Chn) 17-21, 21-11, 21-18; Han Yue (Chn) bt Tomoka Miyazaki (Jpn) 21-7, 14-21, 23-21; Wang Zhiyi (Chn) bt Kim Ga-eun (Kor) 22-20, 21-18.

Mixed doubles: Tang Chun Man-Tse Ying Suet (Hkg) bt Chen Tang Jie-Toh Ee Wei 21-9, 21-18; Feng Yanzhe-Huang Dongping (Chn) bt Goh Soon Huat-Shevon Lai Jemie 21-18, 21-16; Dechapol Puavaranukroh-Supissara Paewsampran (Tha) bt Hiroki Midorikawa-Natsu Saito (Jpn) 21-16, 21-15.

Second round

Men’s doubles: Aaron Chia-Soh Wooi Yik bt Ong Yew Sin-Teo Ee Yi 21-10, 24-22; Goh Sze Fei-Nur Izzuddin Rumsani bt Lee Jhe-huei-Yang Po-hsuan (Tpe) 18-21, 23-21, 21-14; Man Wei Chong-Tee Kai Wun bt Ben Lane-Sean Vendy (Eng) 13-21, 21-19, 21-14; Yap Roy King-Wan Arif Wan Junaidi bt Xie Haonan-Zeng Weihan (Chn) 21-12, 21-17.

Women’s doubles: Pearly Tan-M. Thinaah bt Zhang Shuxian-Bao Lijing (Chn) 22-20, 21-15.

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World champs Tang Jie-Ee Wei bow out, but spirit stays high

PETALING JAYA: Mixed doubles pair Chen Tang Jie-Toh Ee Wei believe there are still plenty of lessons to take away from their Denmark Open campaign despite falling short of reaching the final.

Tang Jie-Ee Wei admitted they could not replicate their victory over world No. 1 Jiang Zhenbang-Wei Yaxin of China, whom they had beaten in the semi-finals of the World Championships in Paris last August.

Even so, the defeat was far from disappointing, as they gave everything before going down 17-21, 21-18, 18-21 in a 65-minute battle.

Their run to the semi-finals remains commendable, especially considering that Ee Wei had only recently recovered from an abdominal injury that kept her out of the Korean Open last month.

For Ee Wei, every match in the tournament was a valuable learning process for both her and Tang Jie as they look to strengthen their partnership.

“Of course, they are the world No. 1 pair right now, and we’re just trying to learn from all our opponents because we’re still not consistent enough.

“But we’ve improved in terms of our communication and mental strength on court. I think we can get even better, and we just need to keep learning from this,” said Ee Wei.

Tang Jie admitted that one of the main reasons behind their defeat in Odense was their inability to make the most of the crucial moments, which allowed their opponents to seize control and score vital points.

“I think we already gave our best, but maybe during the critical points, we couldn’t find the right opportunity to launch an attack, and that made the difference today. But overall, I think we gave our best,” said Tang Jie.

Tang Jie-Ee Wei could face the Chinese pair again if both pairs make it to the semi-finals of the French Open in Cesson-Sevigne starting on Tuesday.

Before that, the Malaysian duo will open their campaign against Taiwan’s Yang Po-hsuan and Hu Ling-fang in the first round.

“I think this week is already over, and we’ll review our match to see what we can improve for the next tournament. We’ll start from zero again – it’s a new week and a new challenge,” said Ee Wei.

SEMI-FINAL RESULTS

Women’s singles: An Se-young (Kor) Akane Yamaguchi (Jpn) 16-21, 21-10, 21-9.

Women’s doubles: Baek Ha-na-Lee So-hee (Kor) bt Yuki Fukushima-Mayu Matsumoto (Jpn) 21-15, 21-19.

Mixed doubles: Jiang Zhengbang-Wei Yaxin (Chn) bt Chen Tang Jie-Toh Ee Wei (Mas) 21-17, 18-21, 21-18.

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Pearly-Thinaah fight through to Arctic Open final as world No. 1 chase heats up

PETALING JAYA: Women’s doubles shuttlers Pearly Tan-M. Thinaah are getting closer to becoming world No. 1 for the first time.

Yesterday, the world No. 2 pair continued their fine form this year by reaching their second consecutive Arctic Open final.

It was their sixth final this year. They won the Thailand Open in May and finished as the runners-up in the Japan Open, Indonesian Open, Indonesian Masters and the World Championshipsthis year.

It was not easy though yesterday as Pearly-Thinaah were pushed hard by Taiwan’s world No. 11 Hung En-tzu-Hsieh Pei-shan but showed great fighting spirit and determination to prevail 22-24, 21-8, 21-17 in 63 minutes in Finland.

The duo also made it into the title match last year before going down to China’s current world No. 1 Liu Shengshu-Tan Ning.

This time, the China pair conceded a walkover in the second round due to injury, enhancing Pearly-Thinaah’s chances of going one better.

The pair will take on Japan’s world No. 6 Rin Iwanaga-Kie Nakanishi for the title today.

In the final today, Pearly-Thinaah will start as the favourites after beating Iwanaga-Nakanishi five times in their past seven meetings including in last year’s Arctic Open semi-final.

If they win, Pearly-Thinaah will have an opportunity to close the gap to Shengshu-Tan Ning in the rankings.

The Chinese duo’s grasp on the world No. 1 spot still looks strong as they currently have 111,834 points compared to Pearly-Thinaah’s 89,916.

Shengshu though is struggling with a leg injury and is a doubt for the upcoming Denmark Open and French Open over the next two weeks.

A strong finish in Finland will be a confidence boost for Pearly-Thinaah and set them up for a good run in both Denmark and France.

The duo will be hoping to become only the second Malaysians to reach No. 1 in the world rankings after Chin Eei Hui-Wong Pei Tty, who achieved the feat in 2009.

Meanwhile, in the men’s doubles, Aaron Chia-Wooi Yik made it to the semi-finals after defeating Taiwan’s Liu Kuang-heng-Yang Po-han 21-19, 19-21, 21-17 on Friday. They will face Dechapol Puavaranukroh-Kittinupong Kedren of Thailand next.

Another pair Mohd Haikal Nazri-Choong Hon Jian also made it to the last four after stunning Denmark’s world No. 4 Kim Astrup-Anders Skaarup Rasmussen 23-21, 21-15 to set up meeting against England’s world No. 15 Ben Lane-Sean Vendy.

RESULTS

(Malaysians unless stated)

Semi-finals

Women’s singles: Akane Yamaguchi (Jpn) bt Anmol Kharb (Ind) 21-10, 21-13.

Women’s doubles: Pearly Tan-M. Thinaah bt Hung En-tzu-Hsieh Pei-shan (Tpe) 22-24, 21-8, 21-17; Rin Iwanaga-Kie Nakanishi (Jpn) bt Chiharu Shida-Arisa Igarashi (Jpn) 21-14, 12-21, 26-24.

Mixed doubles: Feng Yanzhe-Huang Dongping (Chn) bt Dechapol Puavaranukroh-Supissara Paewsampran (Tha) 15-21, 21-16, 21-12; Jiang Zhenbang-Wei Yaxin (Chn) bt Pakkapon Teeraratsakul-Sapsiree Taerattanachai (Tha) 16-21, 21-12, 21-12.

Quarter-finals

Men’s singles: Kunlavut Vitidsarn (Tha) bt Koki Watanabe (Jpn) 21-17, 21-19; Chou Tien-chen (Tpe) bt Lu Guangzu (Chn) 15-21, 21-17, 21-18; Rasmus Gemke (Den) bt Kodai Naraoka (Jpn) 21-19, 21-16; Arnaud Merkle (Fra) bt Jason Teh (Sin) 24-22, 21-18.

Men’s doubles: Aaron Chia-Soh Wooi Yik bt Liu Kuang-heng-Yang Po-han (Tpe) 21-19, 19-21, 21-17; Mohd Haikal Nazri-Choong Hon Jian bt Kim Astrup-Anders Skaarup Rasmussen (Den) 23-21, 21-15; Dechapol Puavaranukroh-Kittinupong Kedren (Tha) bt Liang Weikeng-Wang Chang (Chn) 19-21, 21-14, 21-19; Ben Lane-Sean Vendy (Eng) bt Chen Boyang-Liu Yi (Chn) 21-16, 21-12.

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Jonatan lands first crown of the year in South Korea

PETALING JAYA: Indonesia’s Jonatan Christie captured his first title of the year after handing an upset to Anders Antonsen of Denmark at the Korean Open men’s singles final.

Fourth seed Jonatan had to go the distance but prevailed against top seed Antonsen as the Indonesian won 21-10, 15-21, 21-17 in an hour and 15 minutes at the Suwon Gymna­sium yesterday.

The match had started with both players coming out strong, but the match was halted for several minutes at 5-5 as Antonsen was bleeding from his elbow.

Although it was bandaged, Antonsen was visibly bothered by it, and gave Jonatan the chance to take the lead after the first game.

But despite fighting hard and forcing a rubber set, Antonsen could not contain his opponent as Jonatan marked his seventh win against the Dane player out of 12 meetings on court.

“Sure, it’s not the biggest tournament, but this win means a lot to me,” said Jonatan.

“To win a Super 500 after struggling with injuries and recoveries, I just kept believing in myself to find the motivation, and this is the reward.

“I want to chase more, but right now I want to get more points to level up. I have been trailing so I want to get as much as I can this year,” said the world No. 6.

In the women’s singles, second seed Akane Yamaguchi of Japan stormed past home hero An Se-young to win 21-18, 21-13 and capture her second win of the year.

Yamaguchi, who won the World Championships in Paris last month, got her revenge on Se-young, who had knocked her out in the semi-finals of the China Masters last week and went on to win the tournament.

In men’s doubles, South Koreans Kim Won-ho-Seo Seung-jae won their eighth title of the year as they defeated Indonesia’s Fajar Alfian-Mohd Shohibul Fikri 21-16, 23-21.

It was the top seeds’ third consecutive title after winning the World Championships and China Masters crowns.

South Korea had another reason to cheer as the second-seeded women’s doubles duo Kim Hye-jeong-Kong Hee-yong fought hard to topple top-seeded Japanese pair Rin Iwanaga-Kie Nakanishi 21-19, 21-12.

The mixed doubles final was an all-Chinese affair, and top seeds Feng Yanzhe-Huang Dongping came out on top against second seed Jiang Zhenbang-Wei Yaxin, winning 25-23, 21-11, which also marked their 12th win against their compatriots.

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World champs Chen-Toh brace for toughest test against world No. 1 in semis

PETALING JAYA: Mixed doubles shuttlers Chen Tang Jie-Toh Ee Wei will face their toughest test since becoming world champions when they take on home favourites and world No. 1 Feng Yanzhe-Huang Dongping in the China Masters semi-finals today.

Tang Jie-Ee Wei showed great resilience by battling past Hong Kong’s world No. 6 Tang Chun Man-Tse Ying Suet 21-12, 12-21, 21-17 in 61 minutes at the Shenzhen Arena yesterday.

The world No. 3 pair struggled for control in the match but still found a way to win, continuing their fine form since capturing the world title in Paris at the end of last month.

A job well done: Chen Tang Jie-Toh Ee Wei beat Hong Kong’s Tang Chun Man-Tse Ying Suet 21-12, 12-21, 21-17. — AFP

“We struggled to control the shuttle due to the windy condition inside the stadium. In the beginning of the first game and in the second, we could have done better,” Tang Jie told the Badminton World Federation (BWF).

“Our opponents’ strategy was also good, so we had to tweak our own game plan quickly.”

Ee Wei said: “We have only played against them once before this, so we had to analyse their game well.

“Although we did not play well and made some mistakes, we kept motivating each other and managed to regain our rhythm.”

Yanzhe-Dongping, though, will present a formidable challenge for Tang Jie-Ee Wei.

The world No. 1 pair suffered a shock second-round exit in the world meet but showed that they have quickly regained their form after capturing the Hong Kong Open title on Sunday.

Yanzhe-Dongping also hold the advantage over Tang Jie-Ee Wei after coming out on top six times in their past eight encounters.

The Malaysians, though, are brimming with confidence after their success in Paris and will be aiming to pull off an upset.

Meanwhile, women’s doubles shuttlers Pearly Tan-M. Thinaah fought hard before going down 21-23, 21-19, 20-22 to South Korea’s Baek Ha-na-Lee So-hee in the quarter-finals.

Pearly-Thinaah had a good opportunity to win when they led 20-17 in the third game but could not hold on and lost in an energy sapping 88-minute match.

It was the World Championships silver medallists’ third defeat to world No. 7 Baek Ha-na-Lee-So-hee in six meetings.

“Today’s match was a mental test. Physically, everyone is tired. We kept holding on on court but in the end we rushed too much when had match points,” said Pearly in a post-match interview with the Badminton World Federation (BWF).

Thinaah said: “Our opponents were more patient than us, so this is a lesson for us. We need to learn from this.

It was also over for men’s doubles pair Goh Sze Fei-Nur Izzuddin Rumsani’s run ended when they went down tamely 16-21, 11-21 to Indonesia’s China Open champions Fajar Alfian-Shohibul Fikri.

World No. 3 Sze Fei-Izzuddin narrowly overcame Fajar-Shohibul in their only meeting previously in the Japan Open quarter-finals in July but could not raise their game this time and lost in just 34 minutes.

QUARTER-FINAL RESULTS

(Malaysians unless stated)

Men’s singles: Weng Hongyang (Chn) bt Chi Yu-jen (Tpe) 26-24, 21-12; Christo Popov (Fra) bt Kunlavut Vitidsarn (Tha) 21-11, 11-4, ret.

Men’s doubles: Fajar Alfian-Shohibul Fikri (Ina) bt Goh Sze Fei-Nur Izzuddin Rumsani 21-16, 21-11; Seo Seung-jae-Kim Won-ho (Kor) bt Takuro Hoki-Yugo Kobayashi (Jpn) 11-21, 21-6, 21-17.

Women’s singles: Han Yue (Chn) bt Chen Yufei (Chn) 22-20, 13-21, 21-19; Kim Ga-eun (Kor) bt Wang Zhiyi (Chn) 13-21, 21-17, 21-11; An Se-young (Kor) bt P. V. Sindhu (Ind) 21-14, 21-13; Akane Yamaguchi (Jpn) bt Putri Kusuma (Ina) 21-14, 21-11.

Women’s doubles: Baek Ha-na-Lee So-hee (Kor) bt Pearly Tan-M. Thinaah 23-21, 19-21, 22-20; Jia Yifan-Zhang Shuxian (Chn) bt Yeung Nga Ting-Yeung Pui Lam (Hkg) 21-14, 21-12; Liu Shengshu-Tan Ning (Chn) bt Rin Iwanaga-Kie Nakanishi (Jpn) 20-22, 21-16, 21-10.

Mixed doubles: Chen Tang Jie-Toh Ee Wei bt Tang Chun Man-Tse Ying Suet (Hkg) 21-12, 12-21, 21-17; Feng Yanzhe-Huang Dongping (Chn) bt Guo Xinwa-Chen Fanghui (Chn) 21-11, 21-12; Jiang Zhenbang-Wei Yaxin (Chn) bt Ruttanapak Oupthong-Jhenicha Sudjaipraparat (Tha) 20-22, 21-18, 21-8; Dechapol Puavaranukroh-Supissara Paewsampran (Tha) bt Ye Hong-wei-Nicole Chan (Tpe) 21-13, 21-12.

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Badminton World Championships: Japan’s Yamaguchi beats China’s Chen to win third title

Akane Yamaguchi beat former world No 1 Chen Yufei of China 21-9, 21-13 on Sunday to win the women’s singles badminton world championship final.

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The Japanese fifth seed rarely looked troubled on court in Paris and needed just 37 minutes to add a third world title to her gold medals from 2021 and 2022.

Chen, a Tokyo 2020 Olympic gold medallist, battled past top seed and reigning champion An Se-young of South Korea in a semi-final win marked by a nasty-looking ankle twist early in the second game.

The 27-year-old received treatment on the court Saturday and went immediately to have her ankle examined after the match.

In Sunday’s final, Chen appeared hampered in her movement. Yamaguchi took full advantage in the opening game.

Akane Yamaguchi (right) and Chen Yufei at the end of their final in Paris on Sunday. Photo: AP
Akane Yamaguchi (right) and Chen Yufei at the end of their final in Paris on Sunday. Photo: AP

The fourth seed dug in to stay with Yamaguchi in the second game until the 28-year-old pulled away after the interval to condemn her opponent to a second world silver medal. Cheng lost her previous final to Yamaguchi in Tokyo three years ago.

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Surprises, heartbreaks and tears from the Paris World Championships

Yuqi nails a first

The weight of expectation was heavy on world No. 1 Shi Yuqi, who had been chasing the elusive world title for years. The Chinese ace had faltered at the same Paris venue during the Olympics as the top seed. This time Yuqi beat defending champion Kunlavut Vitidsarn of Thailand in a gripping final. The triumph was all the sweeter as it came against the very man who had shattered his Olympic dream in the last eight in 2024.

Canada’s victorious Lai

Not many had heard of Victor Lai before the world meet, but he announced himself in style by reaching the semi-finals – a first for Canada. The world No. 50 stunned Lu Guangzu (Chn), Jeon Hyeok-jin (Kor) and Loh Kean Yew (Sin) before losing to Shi Yuqi in a tight battle. What makes his run more remarkable is that he is only 20 and a part-time player, juggling badminton with kinesiology studies at York University in Toronto.

French home delight

Hosts were in frenzy when mixed doubles pair Thom Gicquel-Delphine Delrue secured at least a bronze medal, France’s first-ever at the tournament since its inception in 1977, after reaching the semis. They lost to Chen Tang Jie-Toh Ee Wei next but the country’s first medal was meaningful.

Magical show

Not one but two finals and one world title – that’s simply unprecedented. Chen Tang Jie-Toh Ee Wei captured the historic mixed doubles title while Pearly Tan-M. Thinaah became the first women’s pair from the country to win a silver. Both had strong China opponents but they were hardly overawed, giving them a worthy fight.

Putri saves the day

Putri Kusuma, 23, saved the day for Indonesia by winning bronze by beating 2019 world champion P. V. Sindhu of India in the last eight. She fell in the semis to eventual champion Akane Yamaguchi of Japan. The badminton powerhouse had hoped for medals from the men doubles but world No. 4 Fajar Alfian-Rian Ardianto (No. 4), Sabar Gutama-Moh Reza (No. 8) and Leo Rolly-Bagas Maulana (No. 10) had all failed to clear early rounds.

Tale of tears

Paris Olympic Games champion An Se-young of South Korea broke down after her semi-finals defeat to China’s Chen Yufei, which ended her title defence hopes. But in a twist of fate, Yufei too was left tears a day later when a leg injury hampered her in the final, paving the way for Japan’s Akane Yamaguchi to triumph.

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Badminton-Shi clinches maiden world title, Yamaguchi wins third crown

Japan’s Akane Yamaguchi claimed her third world title and China’s Shi Yuqi earned his maiden crown as they triumphed in the women’s and men’s singles finals at the Badminton World Championships in Paris on Sunday (Aug 31).

Shi, the 29-year-old top seed and runner-up in 2018, beat defending champion Kunlavut Vitidsarn of Thailand 19-21 21-10 21-18 in a tense final lasting one hour 17 minutes. Shi levelled the match with a dominant second game before edging a thrilling decider.

Shi led 17-10 in the third game only for Vitidsarn to close the gap to 19-18. The top seed then stretched his lead to 20-18 and the Thai’s next shot drifted long, allowing Shi, who has won his last 10 finals in a row, to close out the contest 21-18.

Yamaguchi, 28, who previously won in 2021 and 2022, eased past Chen Yufei of China 21-9 21-13 in 37 minutes to become only the second woman after Spain’s Carolina Marin to lift three world singles crowns.

Chen, 27, earned her fifth medal at the championships, adding a second silver to her three bronzes. She also lost the 2022 worlds final to Yamaguchi in Tokyo.

Chen, playing with heavy strapping on her right ankle after an injury in her semi-final win over Olympic champion An Se-young, struggled to match Yamaguchi’s pace and precision.

Yamaguchi raced to an 11-4 lead in the opener and never looked back. Chen led 6-4 in the second game but could not sustain the pressure as Yamaguchi took back control by building a decisive 16-10 advantage before sealing victory in 37 minutes.

“Chen got injured yesterday, so it was not easy (for her). I had not anticipated it, but I suppose this kind of score difference was inevitable given her condition,” Yamaguchi said.

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