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The 2018 BWF World Championships was a badminton tournament which was held from 30 July to 5 August at Nanjing Youth Olympic Games Sports Park Arena in Nanjing, China. [ 1 ] Host city selection
The 2018 BWF World Tour, officially known as the 2018 HSBC BWF World Tour for sponsorship reasons, was the first season of the BWF World Tour of badminton, a circuit of 26 tournaments which led up to the World Tour Finals tournament. [1] It replaced the BWF Super Series and BWF Grand Prix, which was held from 2007 to 2017.
The 2018 Thomas & Uber Cup (officially known as the 2018 BWF Thomas & Uber Cup) was the 30th edition of the Thomas Cup and the 27th edition of the Uber Cup, the biennial international badminton championship contested by the men and women's national teams of the member associations of Badminton World Federation (BWF).
The 2018 BWF World Tour Finals (officially known as the HSBC BWF World Tour Finals 2018 for sponsorship reasons) was the final tournament of the 2018 BWF World Tour. It was held from 12 to 16 December 2018 in Guangzhou , China and had a total prize of $1,500,000.
July 30 – August 5: 2018 BWF World Championships (Grade 1) in Nanjing [2] Singles: Kento Momota (m) / Carolina Marín (f) Doubles: China (Li Junhui & Liu Yuchen) (m) / Japan (Mayu Matsumoto & Wakana Nagahara) (f) Mixed: China (Zheng Siwei & Huang Yaqiong) October 15 – 21: 2018 World University Badminton Championships in Kuala Lumpur [3]
A 17-year-old Chinese badminton player died after he collapsed during a tournament in Indonesia, sparking outcry over what some on social media lambasted as a delayed medical response.
1. Tai Tzu-ying (quarterfinals) 2. Akane Yamaguchi (semifinals) 3. P. V. Sindhu (final) 4. Ratchanok Intanon (third round) 5. Chen Yufei (quarterfinals) 6. He Bingjiao (semifinals)
1. Viktor Axelsen (quarterfinals) 2. Lee Chong Wei (withdrew) 3. Shi Yuqi (final) 4. Son Wan-ho (withdrew) 5. Srikanth Kidambi (third round) 6. Kento Momota (champion)