The Phnom Penh Post

Badminton’s China, Japan Opens axed due to virus

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BADMINTON’S prestigiou­s China and Japan Opens were cancelled Wednesday by the Badminton World Federation as it announced that four September tournament­s in Asia would not be played because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Taipei Open from September 1-6, the Korea Open (Sept 8-13), the China Open (Sept 15-20) and the Japan Open (Sept 22-27) were all axed.

“We are deeply disappoint­ed to have to cancel tournament­s, but feel that the wellbeing of ever yone involved is most important at this time,” BWF Secretary General Thomas Lund said in a statement.

“We share the disappoint­ment of many around the world who were looking forward to the return of badminton and appreciate all of the continued support from our fans and partners as we continue to navigate the remainder of the 2020 season,” he added.

The pandemic has upended sports events around the world, from the postponeme­nt of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics to the cancellati­on of Wimbledon.

OnTuesday, theWTA Pan Pacific Open in Japan, one of Asia’s top tennis tournament­s, was cancelled for the first time.

Last week, the men’s ATP Tour and women’s WTA Tour announced all tennis tournament­s in China for the rest of the year had been cancelled, including the Shanghai Masters and WTA Finals in Shenzhen.

Badminton is massively popular across Asia and the China Open is one of only two top-rankedWorl­d Super Tour 1000 series tournament­s on the calendar while the Japan Open is one of the five annual World Tour Super 750 events.

In a normal year devoid of the travel restrictio­ns caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, both would have attracted fields containing all the world’s topranked men and women players.

Later events in Asia such as the Super 500 Hong Kong Open in November and December’s World Tour finals in China remain listed on the calendar, but the BWF cautioned that a decision on future events “will be made in due course.”

 ?? AFP ?? South Korean golfer Ha Ki-won celebratin­g his victory in a simulation booth during the GTour screen golf tournament in Daejeon.
AFP South Korean golfer Ha Ki-won celebratin­g his victory in a simulation booth during the GTour screen golf tournament in Daejeon.
 ?? AFP ?? If a ball lands in a bunker, the player has to play their next stroke from a deep-pile mat (left) to simulate the effect of blasting out from sand.
AFP If a ball lands in a bunker, the player has to play their next stroke from a deep-pile mat (left) to simulate the effect of blasting out from sand.

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