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The 2024 French Open (officially known as the Yonex Internationaux de France de Badminton 2024 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament that took place at the Adidas Arena, Paris, France, from 5 to 10 March 2024 and had a total prize of US$850,000.
The 2024 Orléans Masters (officially known as the Orléans Masters Badminton presented by Victor 2024 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament that took place at the Palais des Sports, Orléans, France, from 12 to 17 March 2024 and had a total prize of US$210,000.
The host nation France reserves a spot each in the men's and women's singles to be officially awarded to its respective highest-ranked badminton player, while four places (two per gender) were entitled to the eligible NOCs interested to have badminton players compete for Paris 2024 under the Universality principle. [4] [5]
Badminton at the 2024 Summer Paralympics was played at the Porte de La Chapelle Arena in Paris, France, from 29 August to 2 September. There were 16 events, two more than the previous Games; seven events each for men and women (six singles, one doubles) and two mixed doubles events.
The Future Series Nouvelle-Aquitaine is an international badminton tournament held in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. The event is part of the Badminton World Federation's Future Series [1] and part of the Badminton Europe Elite Circuit. [2] It was held for the first time in 2022. [3]
French Badminton Federation (FFBaD, French: Fédération Française de Badminton) is the national governing body for the sport of badminton in France. As of 2017, it has more than 191,600 registered players across the country and 1,977 affiliated badminton clubs.
The French Open (French: Internationaux de France de Badminton) is an annual badminton tournament held in France since 1909 and hosted by the Fédération Française de Badminton (FFBad). [1] [2] [3] The tournament was halted between 1915 and 1934, in 1965, 1970, 1972, 1994 and 2006.
On 2 August, security at a badminton match involving the Taiwanese Olympic badminton team forcibly removed a man who displayed a banner which read "Taiwan go for it." Taiwan competes at the Olympics as Chinese Taipei, and any display of Taiwan is forbidden. The Taiwanese government protested the spectator's removal.