Favourites cruise into Korean Open quarters


KUALA LUMPUR: No new stars stole the show in the Korean Open on a day when two tournament favourites, Lee Chong Wei and Chen Long of China, made it to the men’s singles quarter-finals in contrasting fashions.

Top seed and defending champion Chong Wei stayed hot in a cold Seoul by disposing of Marc Zwiebler of Germany 21-14, 21-18 in the second round but second seed Chen Long dropped a game before making it through.

All England champion Chen Long overcame a sluggish start to beat Takuma Euda of Japan 19-21, 21-9, 21-14.

Today, Chong Wei will face a usual suspect – Du Pengyu of China, while Chen Long has set up a match against Nguyen Tien Minh of Vietnam.

National singles coach Rashid Sidek said that the season opener has given a sneak preview of what to expect in the men’s singles competition - probably for the rest of the season.

Except for qualifier Gao Huan of China, all the other quarter-finalists are regulars on the circuit.

“Nothing much has changed. It is the same players who have made it through to the quarter-finals,” said Rashid from Seoul on Thursday.

“Chong Wei had it very easy today. Chen Long was not that impressive in his victory but he will bounce back. I have seen this many times. He will turn his game completely around - especially if his opponent is Chong Wei.

“The Korean Open is the first stop on the 12-leg Tour this year. Based on the outcome today, maybe, we may see the usual suspects dominating the scene this season, too,” he said.

The other quarter-final matches will be between Thailand’s old warhorse Boonsak Ponsana and Gao Huan, and Jan O Jorgensen of Denmark against Kenichi Tago of Japan.

The scenario is slightly different in the men’s doubles where Malaysia’s Lim Khim Wah-Goh V Shem pulled off a stunning upset by beating eighth seeds Lee Sheng-mu-Tsai Chia-hsin of Taiwan to prove that the competition in the men’s doubles is still quite open.

In today’s quarter-finals, the duo, who are searching for a revival in their badminton fortune, will take on top seeds Mathias Boe-Carsten Mogensen of Denmark. The pairs have not crossed paths before.

The other men’s doubles match-ups are as follows – Hiroyuki Endo-Kenichi Hayakawa (Japan) versus Lee Yong-dae-Yoo Yeon-seong (South Korea); Chris Adcock-Andrew Ellis (England) against Liu Xiaolong-Qiu Zihan (China); and Fu Haifeng-Hong Wei (China) versus Takeshi Kamura-Keigo Sonoda (Japan).

Limited time offer:
Just RM5 per month.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month
RM5/month

Billed as RM5/month for the 1st 6 months then RM13.90 thereafters.

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Badminton

Rashid: Malaysia stand good chance to beat Koreans in singles
Wei Chong: We need to build on our mental strength
Jun Hao aims to capture a point regardless of any order he plays in
Boon Heong: Malaysia can get the better of Indonesia if they work as a unit
An infectious tune to put Mei Xing and Co on song for big challenge
Patient June Wei treasures second chance to prove his worth
Sze Fei-Izzuddin feel more responsible and motivated to deliver after hot run in Ningbo
Stay cool if it’s sink or swim
Some stars will be missing but no loss of lustre at Malaysian Masters
The yen’s on their singles

Others Also Read