Satwik-Chirag Denmark Open Badminton Semifinal Live Updates: Japanese pair wins the opening game against Indian duo of Satwiksairaj Rankireddy, Chirag Shetty

Satwik-Chirag Denmark Open badminton Semifinal Live Updates: India’s ace men’s doubles duo, Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty, advanced to the semi-finals of the Denmark Open 2025 after defeating Indonesia’s unseeded pair Muhammad Rian Ardianto and Rahmat Hidayat 21-15, 18-21, 21-16 in a tense 65-minute encounter on Friday.

In a gripping contest at the Jyske Bank Arena in Odense, Satwik and Chirag pulled away from 17-16 to clinch the opening game with four consecutive points.

The Indonesians, however, staged a strong comeback in the second, erasing a 10-4 deficit and levelling the match at one game apiece. In the decider, the Indian pair regained control early, using their sharp net play and powerful smashes to seal the win and secure a place in the final four.

The Indian duo will now face Japan’s world No. 10 pair, Takuro Hoki and Yugo Kobayashi, in the semi-finals on Saturday. Satwik and Chirag lead the Japanese duo 4-1 in head-to-head meetings, giving them confidence ahead of the crucial clash.

The pair, who have been in stellar form this season, are eyeing their first title of 2025 after consecutive runner-up finishes at the Hong Kong Open and China Masters last month.

In men’s singles, Lakshya Sen’s Denmark Open journey ended with a 9-21, 14-21 defeat to France’s Alex Lanier in the quarter-finals. Despite an impressive win over world No. 2 Anders Antonsen earlier, Sen struggled to find rhythm in the last-eight clash.

Stay tuned for live scores, commentary, and updates as Satwik-Chirag aim to book their place in the Denmark Open 2025 final!

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Popov duo fight for France at badminton world championships in Paris

The world badminton championships got underway on Monday in Paris with the pressure on the local heroes Alex Lanier as well as the Popov brothers – Toma Junior and Christo – to translate their dominance at the European championships onto the global stage.

Issued on: 25/08/2025 – 14:36Modified: 25/08/2025 – 15:02

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Lanier gave notice of his potential in August 2024, when he tore through the field to claim the Japan Open and become the first Frenchman to win a World Tour Super 750 event – one of the most coveted trophies on the circuit.

The 20-year-old confirmed that promise at the European championships in April in Denmark where he claimed the gold medal at the expense of compatriot Toma Junior Popov. 

The Popovs combined during the championships in Horsens to claim gold. They will be in action together on Monday night at the world championships at the Adidas Arena in the men’s doubles. Christo, ranked 10th and Toma Junior, the 15th seed, will also play in the singles.

Lanier starts his singles campaign on Monday afternoon against Kantaphon Wangcharoen from Thailand.

Mixed doubles pair Thom Gicquel and Delphine Delrue are seeded eighth at the world championships and start their quest for glory on Tuesday under what Gicquel admitted were new psychological pressures following their victory at the Indonesian Open in June.

The triumph made them the first French duo to win a Super 1000 tournament.

“I don’t think we’ve ever been so much in the spotlight before a world championships,” beamed Gicquel as he finished preparations for the world championships.

The 26-year-old, who has been partnering Delrue for eight years, added: “So there will be more pressure. But it also gives us a lot of confidence and it really makes us want to do well especially when you’re in front of all the French fans, in front of your family and friends, it changes a lot of things.”

World championships a year after Olympic Games

“‘We hope it will be like at the Olympic Games, packed and with incredible support,” added Delrue. “We hope to relive the same emotions as last year, and that it will carry us through the whole week.”

The 9,000 seat Adidas Arena in La Chapelle, northern Paris, was the only venue inside the city built specifically for the 2024 Games.

The seats inside the arena were made from recycled plastic bottle caps while the solar panels adorning the roof help to provide electricity for the sports complex which also housed para badminton during the 2024 Paralympics.

The Popovs, like Delrue and Gicquel, also basked in the energy emitted from stands while competing at the 2024 Paris Olympics where France won 16 gold medals to finish as the top European nation.

Success at the world championships would be a continuation of the recent impressive results of French players which has been an outcome of the way the sport is administered in France.

“It started many years ago with a new structure, more professionalism and the creation of a huge system that helps from the bottom to the best players and with a lot of financial help,” Toma Junior said.

High hopes

He and his sibling will also compete in men’s singles. In doubles, they are ranked 19th while in singles Christo is ranked 10th while Toma Junior is ranked 15th.

Toma Junior said they work a lot on their physical fitness to compete in both categories.

“There are two different kinds of gameplay and two different kinds of mental setup,” he added. “The more serious part is the men’s singles, while doubles is the more enjoyable part.

Lanier and the Popovs – aided by a vociferous hometown crowd – will have to wade through a talented field.

Top seed Shi Yu Qi will be aiming to translate his recent dominance into a first prize at the circuit’s most prestigious tournament after the Olympic Games.

Shi, who opens his campaign on Monday afternoon against India’s Lakshya Sen, won three of four HSBC BWF World Tour Super 1000 tournaments in the run-up to the championships.

The successes propelled the 29-year-old Chinese star to the top of the world rankings. He is seeded to play Anders Antonsen from Denmark in the final.

Antonsen will carry his country’s hopes of glory in the absence of his compatriot Viktor Axelsen.

The two-time world champion and double Olympic champion withdrew after failing to recover from surgery on his back in March.

In the women’s draw, a year after claiming gold at the Olympics, top seed Se-young An from South Korea starts the defence of the singles crown she won in Copenhagen in 2023 against Clara Lassaux from Belgium.

Zhiyi Wang will begin against Agnes Korosi from Hungary and Anna Tatranova, France’s only woman in the singles, plays the fourth seed Yufei Chen.

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India’s badminton darling and former champ P.V. Sindhu stuns second seed Wang Zhiyi at the World Championships

PARIS (Xinhua): Pusarla V. Sindhu, who had been struggling through a slump in recent months, rediscovered her top form in Paris to upset second seed Wang Zhiyi of China and advance into the last eight at the Badminton World Championships.

The Indian shuttler, a world champion in 2019, had failed to progress beyond the second round in her last nine tournaments.

But on Thursday, she rolled back the years with sharp movement and clean shot-making, leaving Wang with few answers on her way to a straight-games victory, 21-19, 21-15.

Wang, who has reached seven finals this year, admitted afterward that her opponent’s level had taken her by surprise.

“I was a bit surprised by her speed. It has been a while since I played her. I did my preparation, but I have to admit that she was much better today,” Wang said.

Sindhu explained that preparation and focus had been key to her win.

“I was prepared for everything,” she said. “I was ready for long rallies, and also for her changing the pace – sometimes playing long exchanges, sometimes using those half-smashes. I had to stay sharp because she has those surprising shots at times.”

Elsewhere in the women’s singles, China’s Chen Yufei dispatched Vietnam’s Nguyen Thuy Linh 21-10, 21-9 in just 32 minutes to set up a quarterfinal clash with Pornpawee Chochuwong of Thailand. Han Yue overcame fellow Chinese Gao Fangjie and now faces two-time world champion Akane Yamaguchi of Japan.

On the men’s side, top seed Shi Yuqi was pushed hard by France’s Christo Popov in a high-quality encounter. Shi recovered from a game down to win 20-22, 21-13, 21-18 after 80 minutes of play.

Compatriot Weng Hongyang also started slowly against France’s Alex Lanier, but rallied to win 21-18, 21-12. The two Chinese players will now face each other in the quarterfinals.

With Toma Junior Popov falling 6-21, 22-20, 19-21 to second seed Anders Antonsen of Denmark, all three French men’s singles players were eliminated on the same day.

In the men’s doubles, Liang Weikeng and Wang Chang could not hold off Asian Games champions Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty from India, losing in three games.

Chen Boyang and Liu Yi, however, kept hopes alive for China with a straight-set win over Denmark’s Rasmus Kjaer and Frederik Sogaard. They will meet Chinese Taipei’s Lee Jhe-huei and Yang Po-hsuan in the quarterfinals. – Xinhua

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Why France is the real unpretentious home of Badminton

It isn’t really surprising that French badminton was the first to be alerted to a crisis of duck feather shortage in Chinese poultry farms that spiked up the prices of badminton shuttles. Badminton’s first citizens in France – those who literally were handed basic light racquets and rudimentary shuttles and urged to play the sport and took it up enthusiastically a few decades ago, in barns and rural schools – were students who formally studied farming.

When the Badminton World Championships return to Paris after 2010, those creating the din and atmosphere at the fancy Adidas Arena, are expected to be these original folk who travel from far-flung rural corners of France, but who have played the sport for years, with rustic fervour and a bohemian passion.

“I visited 8 Ministries of the government starting with Agriculture, Animal Husbandry, Education, Employment, Diversity, besides Sport, to get a quarter of our 10 million Euro funding few years back, to spread badminton across France,” the French Federation of Badminton president Yohan Penel had explained before the Paris Olympics. “The most enthusiastic communities taking up badminton were those training to be farmers,” he explained the humble grassroots that make up the sport, in stark contrast to the urbane, affluent tennis crowd.

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“We’re not as rich as other disciplines like football or tennis. Ours might be the 20th federation in priorities! But it has been one of the most ambitious programs for social utility, and I can confidently say, almost every average French person under the age of 50 would have played badminton at local schools. There’s emotional connect, not elitist private club numbers.”

Migrants to France from all over – Asia and smaller east European countries like Popovs from Bulgaria and Africa, have been welcomed in this unpretentious sport, that’s played with fewest barriers.

Anyone who played at Paris or has turned up at the French Open, will vouch for the show that shouting, chuckling, chatty fans put up, quite unlike the sanitised etiquettes of Roland Garros in a more famous sport. “French badminton fans love to make noise. Plus a lot of Asians come to watch, so it’s a carnival atmosphere, though we have a soft spot for Indian players, especially Satwik and Chirag. They smile a lot, play freely and don’t look like it’s only for the money, and they are funny. There’s something about them that connects with the French crowds,” Penel had said, of the winners at the last French Open in 2024, though the Olympics had ended in heartbreak, a ‘triste’ – melancholy for the Indians.

But on either side of Covid, winning in 2019 and 2024 in France, Satwik-Chirag offered grand memories to the French audience. Covid, though, was when the sport made massive inroads in the country. “The thing with French badminton was, it was always about local clubs and something to do for the whole community. A lot of badminton would be played in sports halls, orchards, vineyards in rural areas but when these closed during Covid, politicians became aware of how much the sport meant to people and local associations became stronger. When people worried about energy supplies in winters, it was also about keeping these badminton centres going. The sport meant a connect,” Penel had explained.

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While France has representation in every category in singles and doubles this year and Alex Lanier has won a Super 750 since the Olympics, to be counted amongst elite like Thom Giquel and Delphine Delrue in mixed doubles, plus the Popov brothers Toma Jr and Christo, the sport retains its wider, humbled, egalitarian base in France.

“Ofcourse we want French players to get medals. But we are not just about creating champions. It’s a bit like France’s politics, we don’t worship personalities. And it’s different from football where it’s all about Messi, Neymar, who are great players. Badminton’s not the same, and we aren’t like the Danish either. We might not all be fans of the World No 1s, but still enjoy watching the sport. Here the crowd can get behind anyone from No 1 to 50 and become crazy fans of them, depending on the connect,” he had said.

The top French players too came up from the hyper localised club system. “Delphine started 15 years back from a local club, so did Thom – inter-club, local area meets, small towns.”

It didn’t stop the French from developing one of the most sophisticated training centres in Europe. While Fernando Rivas, coach of Carolina Marin served a stint there, Penel didn’t dither on bringing in all sorts of professionals. “I’m a mathematician,” he laughed about setting the store by exactitude. The sporting director in the last decade came from American Football, and he took up French badminton as a project – data analytics, top range video sports science, tactical, mental professionals, and those monitoring what to drink, eat, and recovery, plus doubles specialists from England.

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Some of the French contraptions, go a step further than oxygen chambers and gravity-channelling machines, to hasten recoveries from fractures and ligament tears. It’s cutting edge tech in injury rehab. It’s quite the candy store for sports scientists.

The French also run one of the most advanced programs in para badminton, devising ways to bridge the gap with the able-bodied, and para shuttlers can train alongside. The sport’s popularity as an inclusive sport has seen it develop innovations for all strata.

Because it’s low key, the entry barriers are nothing like expensive tennis. “Even when we took it to agricultural schools and colleges, we were clear we don’t want badminton to be elitist. People of different abilities, levels can play together and racquets and plastic shuttles were not that expensive. So even if the top goal was a high performance centre like Denmark, broadbasing was more important.”

Nearing the end of his term, there was another important matter to ensure. “It’s funny but nobody calls them “badminton players” in France. It’s ‘badiste’ (pronounced baa-deest). We are committed to introduce the word and register it as official in all our dictionaries,” he says. That’s yet another government department that received a delegation from a sport that wasn’t content with just that one showbiz event – Paris week for badminton.

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Rise of Popov brothers raises French hopes of historic medal 

PETALING JAYA: Brothers Toma and Christo Popov’s rise to the world’s top 15 in the men’s singles has raised French hopes of a historic medal in the World Championships from Aug 25-31 at home in Paris.

Christo and Toma have showed steady improvement this year, rising to No. 10 and No. 15 respectively in the latest world rankings, joining world No. 7 teammate Alex Lanier in the top 15.

Powerhouse China is the only other country to have three men’s singles players in the world’s top 15 – world No. 1 Shi Yuqi, world No. 4 Li Shifeng and Lu Guangzu (No. 11).

No French shuttler has ever won a medal in the world meet and Lanier and the Popov brothers will be keen to end the long wait in front of their fans at the Adidas Arena in Port de la Chapelle.

Among the three, fast rising youngster Lanier could have the best chance.

The 20-year-old created history by becoming the first French player to capture a World Tour Super 750 title when he won the Japan Open last year.

Lanier then did well to reach the final again this year before going down to Yuqi.

He also proved his ability when he captured the Orleans Masters title and reached the All-England semi-finals in March.

Lanier then won gold in the European Championships, beating Toma in an all-French final.

The player has already declared his intentions to win the world title.

Meanwhile, Christo caught the eye when he finished runner-up to China’s Weng Hongyang in the Swiss Open.

The 23-year-old also did well to reach the semi-finals of the Japan Open and Singapore Open.

Christo has captured two World Tour titles so far in his career – the Super 300 German Open and Hylo Open last year.

Toma’s best performance in the World Tour this year came in the German Open where he made it to the semi-finals.

Christo and Toma will also be competing in Paris together in the men’s doubles and will be out to impress in the event too.

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Rise of Popov brothers raises French hopes of historic medal

PETALING JAYA: Brothers Toma and Christo Popov’s rise to the world’s top 15 in the men’s singles has raised French hopes of a historic medal in the World Championships from Aug 25-31 at home in Paris.

Christo and Toma have showed steady improvement this year, rising to No. 10 and No. 15 respectively in the latest world rankings, joining world No. 7 teammate Alex Lanier in the top 15.

Powerhouse China is the only other country to have three men’s singles players in the world’s top 15 – world No. 1 Shi Yuqi, world No. 4 Li Shifeng and Lu Guangzu (No. 11).

No French shuttler has ever won a medal in the world meet and Lanier and the Popov brothers will be keen to end the long wait in front of their fans at the Adidas Arena in Port de la Chapelle.

Among the three, fast rising youngster Lanier could have the best chance.

The 20-year-old created history by becoming the first French player to capture a World Tour Super 750 title when he won the Japan Open last year.

Lanier then did well to reach the final again this year before going down to Yuqi.

He also proved his ability when he captured the Orleans Masters title and reached the All-England semi-finals in March.

Lanier then won gold in the European Championships, beating Toma in an all-French final.

The player has already declared his intentions to win the world title.

Meanwhile, Christo caught the eye when he finished runner-up to China’s Weng Hongyang in the Swiss Open.

The 23-year-old also did well to reach the semi-finals of the Japan Open and Singapore Open.

Christo has captured two World Tour titles so far in his career – the Super 300 German Open and Hylo Open last year.

Toma’s best performance in the World Tour this year came in the German Open where he made it to the semi-finals.

Christo and Toma will also be competing in Paris together in the men’s doubles and will be out to impress in the event too.

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Jun Hao falls to world No. 1 Kunlavut in China Open second round

PETALING JAYA: Men’s singles shuttler Leong Jun Hao was left disappointed once again after his China Open campaign came to an end in the second round on Thursday (July 24).

Jun Hao, who had hoped to build on his win over Kenta Nishimoto on Tuesday (July 22), found the going tough this time as he was up against none other than world No. 1 Kunlavut Vitidsarn.

It was a gulf in class, and although Jun Hao managed to put up a fight in the opening game, fitness and tactical play proved to be the deciding factors as the Thai shuttler sent him packing 21-23, 7-21 after 48 minutes.

Jun Hao’s woes continued from last week’s Japan Open, where he suffered an early exit after losing in the first round to France’s Alex Lanier.

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South Korean An Se-young makes winning start at badminton’s China Open

CHANGZHOU, China – South Korean women’s top seed An Se-young got her China Open badminton campaign off to a winning start, after recovering from a first-game wobble to beat Canadian Michelle Li 13-21, 21-3, 21-10 in the Chinese city of Changzhou on July 23.

The 23-year-old Paris Olympic singles champion will face countrywoman Sim Yu-jin in the next round.

Women’s defending champion and Chinese second seed Wang Zhiyi beat Chinese Taipei’s Hsu Wen-chi 21-16, 21-9, setting up a second-round clash with Japan’s Riko Gunji, who overcame American Zhang Beiwen 19-21, 21-10, 21-13.

Japanese women’s third seed Akane Yamaguchi also progressed, after carving out a comfortable 21-12, 21-9 victory over Denmark’s Mia Blichfeldt.

Sixth seed Tomoka Miyazaki was the biggest upset of the day in the women’s draw, as the 18-year-old Japanese went down fighting against India’s P.V. Sindhu, the 2016 Rio de Janeiro singles silver medallist, 21-15, 8-21, 21-17.

“She’s doing well and she’s been doing well for quite some time now. It was important for me to win these matches so that it will also give me a morale boost and also that confidence,” the 30-year-old said.

“Sometimes I’ve been going three games, I’ve been coming close, yet I’ve been losing. So, I think it was a good win for me and I need to continue this tempo and keep going … Even though she’s young, she’s doing well and she’s at the top at the moment.”

Sindhu will face 17-year-old compatriot Unnati Hooda in the next round.

Thai women’s seventh seed Pornpawee Chochuwong progressed to the second round as Chinese Taipei’s Chiu Pin-Chian retired while the former was leading the contest 20-22, 21-19, 11-5. Pornpawee faces Sung Shuo-yun next, who is also from Taiwan.

In the men’s draw, Danish second seed Anders Antonsen made light work of Japan’s Yushi Tanaka 21-19, 21-15.

Chinese men’s third seed Shi Yuqi secured a comfortable 21-16, 21-11 over compatriot Weng Hongyang.

Indonesian men’s fourth seed Jonatan Christie also stormed into the next round after ousting Singapore’s Jason Teh 21-17, 21-12, while eighth seed Alex Lanier was bundled out by fellow Frenchman Toma Junior Popov 22-20, 13-21, 21-17.

In the mixed doubles, Singapore pair Terry Hee and Jin Yujia were thumped by Thailand’s fifth seeds Dechapol Puavaranukroh and Supissara Paewsampran 21-12, 21-11 in just 25 minutes. REUTERS

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With more time under coach Kenneth, Leong says he can turn around his game

PETALING JAYA: Shuttler Leong Jun Hao insisted that he is on the right path under coach Kenneth Jonassen despite a difficult year so far.

Jun Hao has suffered early round exits in all his individual tournaments in the men’s singles this year except in the Singapore Open last month where he made it to the quarter-finals.

Yesterday, the 26-year-old showed signs of positivity when he pulled off an impressive win over world No. 13 Kenta Nishimoto in the China Open first round to set up a mouth-watering match-up against reigning world champion Kunlavut Vitidsarn of Thailand tomorrow.

Nishimoto narrowly denied Jun Hao in the Swiss Open second round in March but the latter gained sweet revenge by claiming a 21-15, 21-18 victory in 45 minutes at the Olympic Sports Center Gymnasium in Changzhou.

The world No. 26 Jun Hao is confident that with more time under Jonassen, he can turn around his form.

Jonassen only joined the Badminton Association of Malaysia (BAM) in January and has been working on moulding Jun Hao into a more consistent player.

“Kenneth and I are working well together but I guess we still need some time to add some new technique to my game,” said Jun Hao in a post-match interview with the Badminton World Federation (BWF).

“Playing against different styles, we need a little bit more time to get our strategies right.

“Kenneth focuses more on technique and mindset and he has helped me so far. We just need to keep going.”

The win against Nishimoto was much needed for the 2017 Asian Junior Champion after his tame first-round defeat at the hands of world No. 9 Frenchman Alex Lanier in the Japan Open in Tokyo last week.

“I managed to control the draught in the stadium quite well. The conditions here are quite tricky as the draught is quite strong,” said Jun Hao.

“For sure, this win makes me more confident. I need to prepare well to face Kunlavut next. I will focus on rest and recovery first before trying to come up with a plan against him.”

Jun Hao knows he needs to raise his game against Kunlavut after losing to the latter in straight games in the Singapore Open.

The world No. 1 Thai also came out on top in his home Open last year while Jun Hao’s sole win over Kunlavut in senior tournaments came in the Austrian Open in 2018.

Meanwhile, in the men’s doubles, Mohd Haikal Nazri-Choong Hon Jian suffered an early exit after going down 11-21, 10-21 to Indonesia’s Fajar Alfian-Shohibul Fikri.

RESULTS

(Malaysians only)

First round

Men’s singles: Leong Jun Hao bt Kenta Nishimoto (Jpn) 21-15, 21-18.

Men’s doubles: Fajar Alfian-Shohibul Fikri (Ina) bt Mohd Haikal Nazri-Choong Hon Jian 21-11, 21-10.

Mixed doubles: Chen Tang Jie-Toh Ee Wei bt Presley Smith-Jennie Gai (US) 22-20, 21-12; Wong Tien Ci-Lim Chiew Sien bt Rohan Kapoor-Ruthvika Gadde (Ind) before prevailing 25-27, 21-16, 21-14; Gao Jiaxuan-Wu Mengying (Chn) bt Hoo Pang Ron-Cheng Su Yin 21-15, 21-16.

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Shi beats Lanier to win Japan Open badminton title

China’s former badminton world No. 1 Shi Yuqi won the Japan Open title on Sunday, beating French defending champion Alex Lanier 21-17, 21-15 in the final.

South Korea’s An Se-young downed China’s Wang Zhiyi 21-12, 21-10 in the women’s final to capture an incredible sixth title in seven tournaments so far this year.

Shi was replaced at the top of the men’s world rankings by Thailand’s Kunlavut Vitidsarn in June, but he was too good for rising star Lanier in Tokyo.

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