Global Times - Weekend

Is China’s badminton power in decline?

Rivals hoping to take advantage of aging stars at world championsh­ips

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China is the most successful country in recent badminton history but, spearheade­d by aging legend Lin Dan, they host the World Championsh­ips next week at one of their lowest ebbs.

Lin is in the twilight of his brilliant career at 34, while a sense of crisis engulfs China’s women’s team following their disappoint­ing showing at the Uber Cup in May.

It was not long ago that China dominated badminton. At the London 2012 Olympic Games, they won all five gold medals.

But at Rio 2016, that tally was two, and this year at the Uber Cup China’s women were dumped out in the semifinals by hosts Thailand.

It was the first time since joining the competitio­n in 1984 that China had failed to reach the final, prompting the reported dismissal of the women’s coach Zhang Ning.

Superstar Lin helped save face – China’s men won the Thomas Cup – but the World Championsh­ips begin in Nanjing, capital of East China’s Jiangsu Province on Monday with the tournament wide open.

Lin will be the home-crowd favorite, but the man often regarded as the best player of all time is past his prime.

The former world No.1 is now ninth in the rankings, although he can still turn it on when he really wants to.

In a blow to the Nanjing showpiece, Lin’s long-time rival Lee Chong Wei of Malaysia will be missing because of a respirator­y illness, it was announced this week.

China’s reigning Olympic champion Chen Long is meanwhile struggling for consistenc­y, leaving holder and top seed Viktor Axelsen of Denmark, Japan’s in-form Kento Momota and Kidambi Srikanth of India all fancied to go far.

Indonesian duo Marcus Fernaldi Gideon and Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo are firm favorites in the men’s doubles, underlinin­g how China’s dominance has waned.

China in 2017 replaced Li Yongbo, the bullish and nononsense coach who oversaw more than two decades of success, in an effort to breathe new life into Chinese badminton, which benefits from substantia­l government funding and support.

Zhang Jun, a former Olympian brought in to coach China’s doubles teams, hopes that tasting disappoint­ment can spur them on.

“Actually, losing could be a good thing, especially for the upcoming World Championsh­ips and Asian Games [in August],” he told the online badminton channel Ace21 this week.

“We can find the problems and learn from the losses.”

Shi Yuqi is the highestran­ked Chinese men’s player, at No.3 in the world, while in the women’s draw Chinese Taipei’s Tai Tzu-ying is the clear favorite. Tai has lost just once this year and marched off with an astonishin­g five titles.

One of those who could spring an upset in the women’s competitio­n is P.V. Sindhu, the Indian world No.3 who lost to Japan’s Nozomi Okuhara in last year’s final.

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