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Result Edition(s) Result Champions Kang Min-hyuk 17 February 1999 (aged 24) Debut: 2nd 22: 1R PB: Seo Seung-jae 4 September 1997 (aged 25) 3rd 19, 22: QF PB: Finalist Kim Astrup 6 March 1992 (aged 31) 8th 21: B: 8th 21: B: Reigning European champion, and most participated pair, = PB: Anders Skaarup Rasmussen
The 2023 BWF World Championships (officially known as the TotalEnergies BWF World Championships 2023 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place from 21 to 27 August 2023 in Royal Arena, Copenhagen, Denmark. [1] Copenhagen hosted the BWF World Championships for the fifth time.
Result Champion Kunlavut Vitidsarn 11 May 2001 (aged 22) 3rd 22: S: PB: Finalist Kodai Naraoka 30 June 2001 (aged 22) 2nd 22: 2R PB: Semi-finalist Anders Antonsen 27 April 1997 (aged 26) 6th 19: S: Prannoy H. S. 17 July 1992 (aged 31) 6th 21, 22: QF PB: Quarter-finalist Shi Yuqi 28 February 1996 (aged 27) 4th 18
The 2025 BWF World Tour (officially known as 2025 HSBC BWF World Tour for sponsorship reasons), is the eight season of the BWF World Tour of badminton, a circuit of 31 tournaments that lead up to the World Tour Finals tournament. [1]
Result Champion An Se-young 5 February 2002 (aged 21) 3rd 22: B: PB: Finalist Carolina Marín 15 June 1993 (aged 30) 8th 14, 15, 18: G: Reigning European champion: Semi-finalist Chen Yufei 1 March 1998 (aged 25) 5th 22: S: Reigning Olympics champion: Akane Yamaguchi 2 June 1997 (aged 26) 6th 21, 22: G: Reigning world champion
A 17-year-old Chinese player died after collapsing during a badminton match in Indonesia. SLAMET RIYADI and EDNA TARIGAN. July 1, 2024 at 4:46 AM. ... Butler scores 26, Herro adds 23 and Adebayo ...
The BWF World Championships, aka the World Badminton Championships, is a badminton tournament organized by the Badminton World Federation. [1] It's the most prestigious badminton competition, offering the most ranking points , along with the Summer Olympics badminton events introduced in 1992. [ 2 ]
Security at the Paris Olympics ejected a fan brandishing a green banner that read “Go Taiwan” at a badminton match, sparking anger from the island’s authorities.