Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Toasting 30 years of Yonex All England sponsorship


YONEX, the world’s No.1 badminton brand, is preparing to celebrate a major milestone in the company’s long and outstanding history.
When the Yonex All England Open Championships take place at the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham from March 5-10, it will mark a magnificent 30th consecutive year of title sponsorship.
Yonex is now poised to surpass the Stella Artois tennis tournament (1979-2008) as one of the longest-running tournament sponsorships in sporting history. With the Yonex Japan Open set to celebrate 32 years of title sponsorship this year, it makes Yonex the genuine brand leader in both Asia and Europe.
The Yonex All England Championships are the oldest and most prestigious in Open badminton history and, thanks to the unstinting support of the Yonex Company, it remains the tournament all the top players want to win. That is borne out by the 2013 entry, which has attracted just about all the big names in the sport.
Yonex President Ben Yoneyama, whose father Minoru founded the company in the late1940s, said: “My family have always had a passion for the All England Open Championships, ever since my father first came to the Championships at Wembley Arena as a young man in the 1960s.
“Our company’s mission statement declares that we contribute to the development of the world’s social culture through sport. By our continued support of this great old tournament we have done just that – and will continue to do so.
“Just as we are the No.1 badminton brand, so the Yonex All England Championships is, to me, the No.1 international tournament. We have seen it grow and grow, to be one of the five Premier events on the Badminton World Federation’s Super Series and I am delighted that it will retain that special status through the 2014-2017 cycle.
“It is with great pride that our company is now clocking up 30 years of the Yonex All England to go with the 32 years of the Yonex Japan Open. I can’t think of another company who can boast such commitment to sport.”
Paul Jepson, Managing Director of Yonex UK, added: “Our company is the title sponsor of many tournaments, including the Japan, India, Denmark, and French Open Superseries events. We also sponsor this week’s Yonex German Open in Mulheim.
“But to me the Yonex All England Championships will always be the jewel in the crown because of its history and tradition. It is the tournament that showed others the way – and still does.
“Our reputation at Yonex is well known all over the world and we are delighted to have been title sponsors at the 2011 Yonex BWF World Championships at Wembley Arena and sole equipment suppliers at the London 2012 Olympic Games badminton tournament at Wembley.
 “But Yonex involvement with the All England Championships is paramount to our international reputation. It attracts the world’s best players, it is staged in a superb venue and the presentation of the tournament is outstanding. Thirty consecutive years of title sponsorship of an annual UK tournament is going to take some beating and we are proud to have played our part.”
Adrian Christy, Chief Executive of BADMINTON England, paid his own tribute, saying: “We are indebted to Yonex for their unbelievable commitment to our great Championships.
“The company is clearly as proud to be associated with the All England and its traditions as we at BADMINTON England are.
“The continued Yonex support has enabled us to make the Championships bigger and better year on year and enabled us to maintain our position as one of the five Premier events on the Superseries circuit right through the next cycle to 2017. We couldn’t have achieved this without them.”

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Adcock and Ellis get ready to rock


ENGLAND’S men’s doubles stars Chris Adcock and Andy Ellis will be the most dangerous floaters in the draw after the seeds for the Yonex All England Open Badminton Championships were announced.
Unseeded Adcock and Ellis may be only No. 24 in the world rankings but they start their countdown to the Championships at the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham boosted by victory over the world No.1 pair and top seeds Mathias Boe and Carsten Mogensen.
The top English pair beat Denmark’s 2011 All England champions for the first time in five meetings on Saturday in the semi-finals of the European Mixed Team Championships in Moscow.
After their 16-21 22-20 21-19 win over the Danes Adcock said: “It was the best win of our career. We have come close to these guys so many times. They are the best pair in the world right now and if we can continue to play at that level we will be really happy.”
Ellis added: “It is something we have aimed for for a long time, to beat them. Now we want to do this week in and week out against the best players in the world.”
Adcock and Ellis will be joined in the main men’s doubles draw by new English National champions Chris Langridge and Peter Mills.
But the strength of the overall entry means that those two pairs are England’s only players winning direct entry into the main draw on Wednesday, March 6.
However, six-times English National champion Rajiv Ouseph will be the top qualifying seed in the men’s singles and, after his winning performances in Moscow last week, can remain optimistic of coming through the Tuesday qualifying rounds to join the world’s best players in the first round.
Langridge is aiming to be in contention in the mixed doubles as well as the mixed. He and Heather Olver, the new National mixed doubles champions, are the third qualifying seeds and will be confident about their chances when they go into action with the other England contenders on a Super Tuesday qualifying day (March 5).
Malaysia’s Lee Chong Wei is the top men’s singles seed as he looks to follow up his victories in Korea and Malaysia in the first two OSIM BWF Superseries tournaments of 2013 with another All England triumph.
The world and Olympic silver medallist and Commonwealth champion has appeared in the last four finals and won the title twice. Now he wants to mark the 30th anniversary of Yonex title sponsorship of the All England by giving his sponsors a third title triumph, especially after he was forced to quit last year’s final because of injury.
But even with his great Chinese rival and defending champion Lin Dan missing, he will have to overcome the best of the rest. Twenty-four of the world’s top 28 take their places in the main draw and two of those missing, Denmark’s 1999 winner Peter Gade and Korean Lee Hyun-ll, have retired.
 China will make a triple attack on the title through No. 2 seed Chen Long, No. 3 seed Du Pengyu and No. 5 seed and 2008 winner Chen Jin.
Defending champion Li Xuerui is top seed in the women’s singles with India’s Saina Nehawal seeded to meet her in the final. But three former winners are among the eight seeds in Wang Yihan (2009), Wang Shixian (2011) and Tine Baun (2008 and 2010). Denmark’s Baun will be wanting to bow out on a high note as the All England will be the three-time finalist’s last tournament before retirement.
Boe and Mogensen are top seeds in the men’s doubles with 2011 runners-up Koo Kien Keat and Tan Boon Heong, Malaysia’s 2007 winners, are No. 2. China’s world, Olympic and two-time All England champions are No. 7 seeds.
In the women’s doubles 2011 winners and 2012 runners-up Yu Yang and Wang Xiaoli are top seeds with Denmark’s Kamilla Rytter Juhl and Christinna Pedersen at No.2.
In the mixed doubles Xu Chen and Ma Jin, the 2011 champions, are top seeds with 2010 winners and world and Olympic champions Zhang Nan and Zhao Yunlei only No. 5 seeds.
SEEDS
Men’s singles                                             Women’s singles
1 Lee Chong Wei (Mas)                                            1 Li Xuerui (Chn)
2 Chen Long (Chn)                                            2 Saina Nehwal (Ind)
3 Du Pengyu (Chn)                                            3 Wang Yihan (Chn)
4 Sony Dwi Kuncoro (Ina)                                            4 Juliane Schenk (Ger)
5 Chen Jin (Chn)                                            5 Sung Ji Hyun (Kor)
6 Hu Yun (Hkg)                                            6 Wang Shixian (Chn)
7 Kenichi Tago (Jpn)                                            7 Tine Baun (Den)
8 Tien Minh Nguyen (Vie)                                            8 Ratchanok Intanon (Tha)

Men’s doubles                                            Women’s doubles
1 Matthias Boe & Carsten Mogensen (Den)                      1 Yu Yang & Wang Xiaoli (Chn)
2 Koo Kien Keat & Tan Boon Heong (Mas)                      2 Kamilla Rytter Juhl & Christinna Pedersen (Den)
3 Ko Sung Hyun & Lee Yong Dae (Kor)                                 3 Ayaka Takahashi & Misaki Matsutomo (Jpn)
4 Kenichi Hayakawa & Hiroyuki Endo (Jpn)                      4 Jang Ye Na & Hye Won Eom (Kor)
5 Ye Shen & Hong Wei (Chn)                                            5 Ma Jin & Tang Jinhua (Chn)
6 Kim Sa Rang & Kim Ki Jung (Kor)                                 6 Satoko Suetsuna & Miyuki Maeda (Jpn)
7 Cai Yun & Fu Haifeng (Chn)                                            7 Kim Ha Na & Jung Kyung Eun (Kor)
8 Hendra Setiawan & Mohammad Ahsan (Ina)                      8 Duanganong Aroonkesorn & Kunchala Voravichitchaikul (Tha)

Mixed doubles
1 Xu Chen & Ma Jin
2 Tontowi Ahmad & Liliyana Natsir (Ina)
3 Peng Soon Chan & Liu Ying Goh (Mas)
4 Joachim Fischer Nielsen & Christinna Pedersen (Den)
5 Zhang Nan & Zhao Yunlei (Chn)
6 Sudket Prapakamol & Saralee Thoungthongkam (Tha)
7 Muhammad Rijal & Debby Susanto (Ina)
8 Robert Mateusiak & Nadiezda Zieba (Pol)