Lu Lan
Lu Lan | |
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Lu Lan at the 2006 German Open | |
Personal information | |
Country | China |
Born |
Changzhou, Jiangsu, China | May 2, 1987
Height | 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) |
Women's singles | |
Highest ranking | 2 (May 15, 2008 [1]) |
Updated on 13:01, 26 October 2013 (UTC). |
Lu Lan | |||||||
Traditional Chinese | 盧蘭 | ||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 卢兰 | ||||||
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Lu Lan (born May 2, 1987 in Changzhou, Jiangsu) is a female badminton player from China.
Career
In 2004 she won the Polish Open. In 2006 she won the Korea Open and finished the year in the 5th position in the BWF World Ranking.[2]
In 2007 she won the Denmark Super Series, and was a bronze medalist at the World Championships in Kuala Lumpur, losing to the eventual champion Zhu Lin in the semifinals. In November of that year she reached the third place in the BWF World Ranking.[1]
In 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, she lost to Xie Xingfang 21-7, 10-21, 12-21 in the semi-finals and was then upset by Maria Kristin Yulianti from Indonesia 21-11, 13-21, 15-21 in the bronze medal match. Earlier in 2008 she had reached the final of the prestigious All-England Championships where she lost a very close match to Denmark's Tine Rasmussen.
In 2009, she achieved her greatest success to date when she won the 2009 BWF World Championship Women's Singles title in Hyderabad, India. The match was against compatriot, and two times winner of the event (2005 and 2006), Xie Xingfang; winning in two straight games 23-21, 21-12.[3]
Record Against Selected Opponents
Record against Olympic quarterfinalists, World Championship semifinalists, Super Series finalists, plus all Olympic opponents[4]
- Petya Nedelcheva 2–0
- Anna Rice 1–0
- Nicole Grether 1–0
- Xie Xingfang 2–7
- Jiang Yanjiao 2–3
- Zhang Ning 1–1
- Wang Lin 3–1
- Zhu Lin 4–1
- Wang Yihan 3–5
- Wang Shixian 1–2
- Cheng Shao-chieh 5–1
- Tine Rasmussen 2–4
- Tracey Hallam 4–0
- Pi Hongyan 0–1
- Xu Huaiwen 2–1
- Juliane Schenk 1–0
- Yip Pui Yin 3–1
- Zhou Mi 1–5
- Wang Chen 5–0
- Saina Nehwal 1–4
- Maria Kristin Yulianti 3–2
- Eriko Hirose 6–2
- Sayaka Sato 2–0
- Wong Mew Choo 2–2
- Karen Foo Kune 1–0
- Ratchanok Intanon 1–1
- Porntip Buranaprasertsuk 2–0
References
- 1 2 IBF Historical Ranking - WOMENS SINGLES, InternationalBadminton.org, Ranking Date: November 1, 2007
- ↑ IBF Historical Ranking - WOMENS SINGLES, InternationalBadminton.org, Ranking Date: December 28, 2006
- ↑ "Lu Lan crowned world champion in all-Chinese final". morethanthegames.co.uk. 2009-08-17. Retrieved 2009-08-18.
- ↑ http://www.tournamentsoftware.com/sport/player.aspx?id=2E568925-AFC2-48D0-872F-344AA84F6220&player=338