Bimantara World Badminton Junior Invitation Championships
The Bimantara World Junior Championships was an international invitation badminton tournament for junior players. It was held in Jakarta, Indonesia from 1987 to 1991.[1] Sponsor of the annually held event was the Indonesian Bimantara Group.
After the fifth edition of the Bimantara World Junior Championships, the event was replaced by the official World Junior Championships for badminton players under 19 years old by the International Badminton Federation.
Champions
Year | Boys' singles | Girls' singles | Boys' doubles | Girls' doubles | Mixed doubles |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1987 | Ardy Wiranata | Susi Susanti[2] | Wu Wenkai Jin Feng | Susi Susanti Lilik Sudarwati | Ardy Wiranata Susi Susanti |
1988 | Thomas Stuer-Lauridsen | Susi Susanti | Aras Razak Ricky Subagja[3] | Susi Susanti Lilik Sudarwati | Ricky Subagja Lilik Sudarwati |
1989 | Heryanto Arbi | Kim Ji-hyun | Choi Ji-tae Lee Heung-soon | Eliza Nathanael Finarsih | John Quinn Joanne Wright |
1990 | Henry G. Wijadi | Yuni Kartika | Seng Kok Kiong Hadi Sugianto | Ye Zhaoying Liu Hong | Hu Zhilang Peng Xingyong |
1991 | Indra Wijaya | Yao Yan | Dadan Hidayat Kurnia | Gu Jun[4] Han Jingna | Thomas Damgaard Rikke Olsen |
References
- ^ Lim Peng Han (2016-02-04). "Title The transition and transformation of badminton into a globalized game, 1893-2012: A study of the trials and tribulations of Malaysian badminton players competing for Thomas Cup and Olympic gold medals" (PDF). Retrieved 2019-09-25.
- ^ "Susy Susanti | BWF Virtual Museum". bwfmuseum.isida.pro. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
- ^ "Ricky Soebagdja | BWF Virtual Museum". bwfmuseum.isida.pro. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
- ^ "Gu Jun | BWF Virtual Museum". bwfmuseum.isida.pro. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
External links
- BWF: World Junior Championships
- v
- t
- e
- Jakarta 1992
- Kuala Lumpur 1994
- Silkeborg 1996
- Melbourne 1998
- Guangzhou 2000
- Pretoria 2002
- Richmond 2004
- Incheon 2006
- Waitakere City 2007
- Pune 2008
- Alor Setar 2009
- Guadalajara 2010
- Taipei 2011
- Chiba 2012
- Bangkok 2013
- Alor Setar 2014
- Lima 2015
- Bilbao 2016
- Yogyakarta 2017
- Markham 2018
- Kazan 2019
Auckland 2020Chengdu 2021- Santander 2022
- Spokane 2023
- Bimantara World Junior Championships (1987–1991)
- List of medalists