India Open (badminton)

(Redirected from India Open)

The India Open is an annual badminton event which has been held in India since 2008 and is a BWF World Tour Super 750 international badminton tournament.[1] Its first three editions were designated as Grand Prix Gold events. In 2011, it was upgraded to the BWF Superseries tournament.[2] Since then until 2019, it was held annually at the Siri Fort Sports Complex, New Delhi.[3] BWF categorised India Open as one of the seven BWF World Tour Super 500 events as per new BWF events structure since 2018. The India Open was upgraded to a BWF World Tour Super 750 event, effective from 2023.[1]

India Open
Official website
Founded1973; 51 years ago (1973)
Editions21 (2024)
LocationNew Delhi, India
VenueK. D. Jadhav Indoor Hall (2024)
Prize moneyUS$850,000 (2024)
Men's
Draw32S / 32D
Current champions
Most singles titles3
Lee Chong Wei
Most doubles titles3
Marcus Fernaldi Gideon
Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo
Women's
Draw32S / 32D
Current champions (doubles)
Most singles titles3
Ratchanok Intanon
Most doubles titles2
Miyuki Maeda
Satoko Suetsuna
Misaki Matsutomo
Ayaka Takahashi
Greysia Polii
Apriyani Rahayu
Mixed doubles
Draw32
Current championsDechapol Puavaranukroh
Sapsiree Taerattanachai
Most titles (male)3
Tontowi Ahmad
Most titles (female)3
Liliyana Natsir
Super 750
Last completed
2024 India Open

Results

edit
YearMen's singlesWomen's singlesMen's doublesWomen's doublesMixed doubles
1973 Svend Pri Eva Twedberg Elliot Stuart
Derek Talbot
Eva Twedberg
Joke van Beusekom
Elliot Stuart
Eva Twedberg
1974–
1978
No competition
1979 Dhany Sartika Tjan So Gwan Rudy Heryanto
Hariamanto Kartono
Ivanna Lie
Tjan So Gwan
Hariamanto Kartono
Tjan So Gwan
1980No competition
1981 Prakash Padukone Zheng Yuli Stefan Karlsson
Thomas Kihlström
Nora Perry
Jane Webster
Ray Stevens
Nora Perry
1982No competition
1983 Morten Frost Yoo Sang-hee Jesper Helledie
Jens Peter Nierhoff
Kim Yun-ja
Yoo Sang-hee
No competition
1984No competition
1985 Steve Baddeley Helen Troke Kim Moon-soo
Park Joo-bong
Hwang Sun-ai
Kang Haeng-suk
Steve Baddeley
Gillian Gowers
1986–
1996
No competition
1997 Heryanto Arbi Cindana Hartono Kusuma Ade Lukas
Ade Sutrisna
Etty Tantri
Cynthia Tuwankotta
Imam Tohari
Emma Ermawati
1998–
2007
No competition
2008 Boonsak Ponsana Zhou Mi Guo Zhendong
Xie Zhongbo
Cheng Wen-hsing
Chien Yu-chin
He Hanbin
Yu Yang
2009 Taufik Hidayat Pi Hongyan Choong Tan Fook
Lee Wan Wah
Ma Jin
Wang Xiaoli
Flandy Limpele
Vita Marissa
2010 Alamsyah Yunus Saina Nehwal Mohd Zakry Abdul Latif
Mohd Fairuzizuan Mohd Tazari
Shinta Mulia Sari
Yao Lei
Valiyaveetil Diju
Jwala Gutta
2011 Lee Chong Wei Porntip Buranaprasertsuk Hirokatsu Hashimoto
Noriyasu Hirata
Miyuki Maeda
Satoko Suetsuna
Tontowi Ahmad
Liliyana Natsir
2012 Son Wan-ho Li Xuerui Bodin Isara
Maneepong Jongjit
Jung Kyung-eun
Kim Ha-na
2013 Lee Chong Wei Ratchanok Intanon Liu Xiaolong
Qiu Zihan
Miyuki Maeda
Satoko Suetsuna
2014 Wang Shixian Mathias Boe
Carsten Mogensen
Tang Yuanting
Yu Yang
Joachim Fischer Nielsen
Christinna Pedersen
2015 Srikanth Kidambi Saina Nehwal Chai Biao
Hong Wei
Misaki Matsutomo
Ayaka Takahashi
Liu Cheng
Bao Yixin
2016 Kento Momota Ratchanok Intanon Marcus Fernaldi Gideon
Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo
Lu Kai
Huang Yaqiong
2017 Viktor Axelsen P. V. Sindhu Shiho Tanaka
Koharu Yonemoto
2018 Shi Yuqi Beiwen Zhang Greysia Polii
Apriyani Rahayu
Mathias Christiansen
Christinna Pedersen
2019 Viktor Axelsen Ratchanok Intanon Lee Yang
Wang Chi-lin
Wang Yilyu
Huang Dongping
2020Cancelled[note 1]
2021Cancelled[note 2]
2022 Lakshya Sen Busanan Ongbamrungphan Satwiksairaj Rankireddy
Chirag Shetty
Benyapa Aimsaard
Nuntakarn Aimsaard
Terry Hee
Tan Wei Han
2023 Kunlavut Vitidsarn An Se-young Liang Weikeng
Wang Chang
Nami Matsuyama
Chiharu Shida
Yuta Watanabe
Arisa Higashino
2024 Shi Yuqi Tai Tzu-ying Kang Min-hyuk
Seo Seung-jae
Mayu Matsumoto
Wakana Nagahara
Dechapol Puavaranukroh
Sapsiree Taerattanachai
  1. ^ This tournament, originally to be played from 8 to 13 December, was later cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in India.
  2. ^ This tournament, originally to be played from 11 to 16 May, was later cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in India.

Performance by nation

edit
As of the 2024 edition
PosNationMSWSMDWDXDTotal
1  Indonesia4254621
2  China2342516
3  Japan117110
 Thailand2511110
5  Denmark4228
 India33118
 South Korea12238
8  England11112.56.5
9  Malaysia325
10  Chinese Taipei1113
 Sweden110.50.53
12  Singapore112
13  France11
 Hong Kong11
 United States11
16  Netherlands0.50.5
Total2121212120104

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "BWF Launches New Events Structure". 29 November 2017.
  2. ^ "Indian Open to become a Super Series event from 2011". NDTV. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  3. ^ "India Open Super Series from April 26". The Hindu. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
edit