Badminton at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Women's doubles

Women's doubles
at the Games of the XXXII Olympiad
VenueMusashino Forest Sport Plaza
Date24 July – 2 August 2021
Competitors32 (16 pairs) from 13 nations
Medalists
Greysia Polii
Apriyani Rahayu
 Indonesia
Chen Qingchen
Jia Yifan
 China
Kim So-yeong
Kong Hee-yong
 South Korea

The women's doubles badminton tournament at the 2020 Summer Olympics took place from 24 July to 2 August at the Musashino Forest Sport Plaza at Tokyo. There were 16 pairs (32 players) from 14 nations competing.

Greysia Polii and Apriyani Rahayu of Indonesia won the gold medal. It was their first Olympic medal, the country's first from badminton women's doubles, and the only gold won by the contingent in Tokyo 2020 Olympics. Indonesia also became the second country to have won all five Olympic badminton events, after China in London 2012 Olympics.[1]

Background

This was the 8th appearance of the event as a full medal event. Badminton was introduced as a demonstration sport in 1972 (without women's doubles), held again as an exhibition sport in 1988, and added to the full programme in 1992; the women's doubles tournament had been held since.[2]

The reigning champions were Misaki Matsutomo and Ayaka Takahashi of Japan, who were not defending their title following Takahashi's retirement. Japan has two of the three top-ranked qualifiers, however, with Yuki Fukushima and Sayaka Hirota (#1) and Mayu Matsumoto and Wakana Nagahara (#3). Matsumoto and Nagahara were the reigning world champions, defeating Fukushima and Hirota in the final. China, which had won 5 of the previous 7 editions of the women's doubles, had the #2-ranked pair Chen Qingchen and Jia Yifan.

Qualification

The badminton qualification system provided for 16 women's doubles teams (32 players). Following revisions due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the qualifying periods were 29 April 2019 to 15 March 2020 and 4 January to 13 June 2021, with the ranking list of 15 June 2021 controlling qualification.

Qualification was done entirely through the ranking list. Nations with at least two pairs in the top 8 were able to send a maximum of 2 pairs (4 players); all other nations were limited to a single pair. Pairs were taken from the ranking list in order, respecting those national limits, until 16 pairs were selected. However, each continent was guaranteed to have at least one pair with the lowest-ranking pairs displaced if necessary to make room for a continental guarantee.

Competition format

The tournament started with a group phase round-robin. There were four groups of four teams each; the top two highest-ranked pairs from each group advanced to a knockout stage.[3] The knockout stage was a three-round single-elimination tournament with a bronze medal match.[4]

Matches were played best-of-three games. Each game was played to 21, except that a pair must win by 2 unless the score reached 30–29.[4]

Seeds

  1.  Yuki Fukushima / Sayaka Hirota (JPN) (Quarter-finals)
  2.  Chen Qingchen / Jia Yifan (CHN) (Silver medalists)
  3.  Mayu Matsumoto / Wakana Nagahara (JPN) (Quarter-finals)
  4.  Lee So-hee / Shin Seung-chan (KOR) (Fourth place)

Schedule

The tournament was held over a 10-day period, with 7 competition days and 3 open days.[5][6]

Legend
PPreliminaries QFQuarter-finals SFSemi-finals MMedal matches
Date24 Jul25 Jul26 Jul27 Jul28 Jul29 Jul30 Jul31 Jul1 Aug2 Aug
EventMEMEMEMEMEMEMAMEAEAE
Women's doublesPQFSFM

Group stage

Group A

Pos Team Pld W L GF GA GD PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Greysia Polii (INA)
 Apriyani Rahayu (INA)
3 3 0 6 1 +5 142 106 +36 3 Advance to quarter-finals
2  Yuki Fukushima (JPN)
 Sayaka Hirota (JPN) (H)
3 2 1 5 3 +2 152 129 +23 2
3  Chow Mei Kuan (MAS)
 Lee Meng Yean (MAS)
3 1 2 3 4 1 117 136 19 1
4  Chloe Birch (GBR)
 Lauren Smith (GBR)
3 0 3 0 6 6 86 126 40 0
Source: TOCOG
(H) Host
DateTimePair 1ScorePair 2Set 1Set 2Set 3
24 July09:00 Greysia Polii
Apriyani Rahayu
2–0 Chow Mei Kuan
Lee Meng Yean
21–1421–17
20:40 Yuki Fukushima
Sayaka Hirota
2–0 Chloe Birch
Lauren Smith
21–1321–14
25 July19:20 Yuki Fukushima
Sayaka Hirota
2–1 Chow Mei Kuan
Lee Meng Yean
17–2121–1521–8
26 July18:00 Greysia Polii
Apriyani Rahayu
2–0 Chloe Birch
Lauren Smith
21–1121–13
27 July10:40 Yuki Fukushima
Sayaka Hirota
1–2 Greysia Polii
Apriyani Rahayu
22–2421–138–21
Chow Mei Kuan
Lee Meng Yean
2–0 Chloe Birch
Lauren Smith
21–1921–16

Group B

Pos Team Pld W L GF GA GD PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Mayu Matsumoto (JPN)
 Wakana Nagahara (JPN) (H)
3 3 0 6 1 +5 143 105 +38 3 Advance to quarter-finals
2  Selena Piek (NED)
 Cheryl Seinen (NED)
3 2 1 4 3 +1 137 111 +26 2
3  Rachel Honderich (CAN)
 Kristen Tsai (CAN)
3 1 2 4 4 0 150 125 +25 1
4  Doha Hany (EGY)
 Hadia Hosny (EGY)
3 0 3 0 6 6 37 126 89 0
Source: TOCOG
(H) Host
DateTimePair 1ScorePair 2Set 1Set 2Set 3
24 July18:00 Mayu Matsumoto
Wakana Nagahara
2–0 Doha Hany
Hadia Hosny
21–721–3
18:40 Selena Piek
Cheryl Seinen
2–1 Rachel Honderich
Kristen Tsai
16–2121–1421–15
25 July20:00 Mayu Matsumoto
Wakana Nagahara
2–1 Rachel Honderich
Kristen Tsai
14–2121–1921–18
26 July19:20 Selena Piek
Cheryl Seinen
2–0 Doha Hany
Hadia Hosny
21–621–10
27 July18:00 Mayu Matsumoto
Wakana Nagahara
2–0 Selena Piek
Cheryl Seinen
24–2221–15
18:40 Rachel Honderich
Kristen Tsai
2–0 Doha Hany
Hadia Hosny
21–521–6

Group C

Pos Team Pld W L GF GA GD PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Lee So-hee (KOR)
 Shin Seung-chan (KOR)
3 2 1 5 2 +3 144 104 +40 2[lower-alpha 1] Advance to quarter-finals
2  Du Yue (CHN)
 Li Yinhui (CHN)
3 2 1 4 2 +2 115 91 +24 2[lower-alpha 1]
3  Setyana Mapasa (AUS)
 Gronya Somerville (AUS)
3 1 2 2 5 3 91 136 45 1[lower-alpha 2]
4  Maiken Fruergaard (DEN)
 Sara Thygesen (DEN)
3 1 2 3 5 2 138 157 19 1[lower-alpha 2]
Source: TOCOG
Notes:
  1. Head-to-head point: South Korea 1, China 0.
  2. Head-to-head point: Australia 1, Denmark 0.
DateTimePair 1ScorePair 2Set 1Set 2Set 3
24 July11:00 Du Yue
Li Yinhui
2–0 Maiken Fruergaard
Sara Thygesen
21–1321–15
18:40 Lee So-hee
Shin Seung-chan
2–0 Setyana Mapasa
Gronya Somerville
21–921–6
25 July13:20 Lee So-hee
Shin Seung-chan
1–2 Maiken Fruergaard
Sara Thygesen
21–1519–2120–22
26 July20:00 Du Yue
Li Yinhui
2–0 Setyana Mapasa
Gronya Somerville
21–921–12
27 July11:20 Maiken Fruergaard
Sara Thygesen
1–2 Setyana Mapasa
Gronya Somerville
19–2121–1312–21
20:00 Lee So-hee
Shin Seung-chan
2–0 Du Yue
Li Yinhui
21–1921–12

Group D

Pos Team Pld W L GF GA GD PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Chen Qingchen (CHN)
 Jia Yifan (CHN)
3 3 0 6 1 +5 145 100 +45 3 Advance to quarter-finals
2  Kim So-yeong (KOR)
 Kong Hee-yong (KOR)
3 2 1 5 3 +2 161 158 +3 2
3  Gabriela Stoeva (BUL)
 Stefani Stoeva (BUL)
3 1 2 3 5 2 147 156 9 1
4  Jongkolphan Kititharakul (THA)
 Rawinda Prajongjai (THA)
3 0 3 1 6 5 106 145 39 0
Source: TOCOG
DateTimePair 1ScorePair 2Set 1Set 2Set 3
24 July11:40 Chen Qingchen
Jia Yifan
2–0 Jongkolphan Kititharakul
Rawinda Prajongjai
21–621–10
Kim So-yeong
Kong Hee-yong
2–1 Gabriela Stoeva
Stefani Stoeva
21–2321–1223–21
25 July10:40 Kim So-yeong
Kong Hee-yong
2–0 Jongkolphan Kititharakul
Rawinda Prajongjai
21–1924–22
26 July13:20 Chen Qingchen
Jia Yifan
2–0 Gabriela Stoeva
Stefani Stoeva
21–1821–15
27 July12:00 Chen Qingchen
Jia Yifan
2–1 Kim So-yeong
Kong Hee-yong
19–2121–1621–14
19:20 Gabriela Stoeva
Stefani Stoeva
2–1 Jongkolphan Kititharakul
Rawinda Prajongjai
21–1116–2121–17

Finals

The quarter-finals were held on 29 July 2021, the semi-finals on 31 July, and the medal matches on 2 August 2021.[7]

Quarter-finals Semi-finals Gold medal match
               
A1  Greysia Polii (INA)
 Apriyani Rahayu (INA)
21 20 21
C2  Du Yue (CHN)
 Li Yinhui (CHN)
15 22 17
A1  Greysia Polii (INA)
 Apriyani Rahayu (INA)
21 21
C1  Lee So-hee (KOR)
 Shin Seung-chan (KOR)
19 17
C1  Lee So-hee (KOR)
 Shin Seung-chan (KOR)
21 21
B2  Selena Piek (NED)
 Cheryl Seinen (NED)
8 17
A1  Greysia Polii (INA)
 Apriyani Rahayu (INA)
21 21
D1  Chen Qingchen (CHN)
 Jia Yifan (CHN)
19 15
D2  Kim So-yeong (KOR)
 Kong Hee-yong (KOR)
21 14 28
B1  Mayu Matsumoto (JPN)
 Wakana Nagahara (JPN)
14 21 26
D2  Kim So-yeong (KOR)
 Kong Hee-yong (KOR)
15 11 Bronze medal match
D1  Chen Qingchen (CHN)
 Jia Yifan (CHN)
21 21
A2  Yuki Fukushima (JPN)
 Sayaka Hirota (JPN)
21 10 10 C1  Lee So-hee (KOR)
 Shin Seung-chan (KOR)
10 17
D1  Chen Qingchen (CHN)
 Jia Yifan (CHN)
18 21 21 D2  Kim So-yeong (KOR)
 Kong Hee-yong (KOR)
21 21

References

  1. "Indonesia take shock gold in women's doubles badminton, People's Republic of China claim silver". Olympics.com. Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. 2 August 2021. Archived from the original on 11 August 2021. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  2. "Badminton – The Olympic Journey". Badminton World Federation. Retrieved 24 July 2021.
  3. "Tokyo 2020 will be the eighth time badminton was being held as an Olympic medal sport". Badminton World Federation. Archived from the original on 24 July 2016. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  4. "Everything you need to know about Olympic Badminton at Tokyo 2020". Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. 23 June 2021. Retrieved 23 June 2021.
  5. "Schedule - Badminton Tokyo 2020 Olympics". Olympian Database. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
  6. "Badminton Competition Schedule". Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  7. "Badminton Women's Doubles - Bracket Results". Olympics.com. Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. Retrieved 29 July 2021.
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