Anu Nieminen Explained

Anu Nieminen
Birth Name:Anu Kristiina Weckström
Country:Finland
Birth Date:1977 12, df=yes
Birth Place:Helsinki, Finland
Height:1.70 m
Weight:61 kg
Event:Women's singles
Handedness:Right
Highest Ranking:37
Date Of Highest Ranking:21 January 2010
Bwf Id:AF8FA109-B419-4BA3-9149-38A305B7ECB0

Anu Kristiina Nieminen (born 16 December 1977; née Weckström) is a Finnish badminton player. Born in Helsinki, Nieminen joined the national team in 1994.[1] She is one of the best badminton players in Finland, having won twelve National Championships,[2] and competed in four consecutive Summer Olympics.[3]

Nieminen first represented Finland at the Olympic level at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. She reached the second round before losing to Kanako Yonekura of Japan.[4] In 2004 Olympics, she was defeated by Kaori Mori of Japan in the Round of 32.[5] In 2006, she signed with the Finnish cosmetics company Lumene, along with her husband, professional tennis player Jarkko Nieminen.

Nieminen competed at the 2008 Olympics, she again reached the second round, this time losing to Huaiwen Xu of Germany.[6] In the 2012 Olympics, she won her first match against Victoria Montero of Mexico, but after losing to Tai Tzu-ying of Chinese Taipei, she did not advance beyond the group stages.[7] In 2013, she joined the Lillerød Badminton in Denmark as a coach for the young players.[8]

Achievements

BWF International Challenge/Series

Women's singles

YearTournamentOpponentScoreResult
2011Slovak Open Patty Stolzenbach21–14, 19–21, 21–16 Winner
2008Austrian International Zhang Xi21–19, 13–21, 9–21 Runner-up
2005Italian International Tine Rasmussen4–11, 5–11 Runner-up
2003Dominican Republic International Miyo Akao5–11, 11–7, 11–13 Runner-up
2002Slovenian International Petya Nedelcheva11–6, 1–11, 9–11 Runner-up
2002Finnish International Petya Nedelcheva7–1, 7–4, 7–0 Winner
2001Irish International Kara Solmundson3–7, 7–1, 2–7, 5–7 Runner-up
2001Norwegian International Tatiana Vattier7–0, 7–1, 7–4 Winner
2001Portugal International Pi Hongyan8–11, 1–11 Runner-up
2000Scottish International Christina Sørensen11–4, 3–11, 11–4 Winner
2000Norwegian International Katja Wengberg11–7, 11–6 Winner
2000Croatian International Markéta Koudelková11–6, 11–4 Winner
2000Dutch International Lonneke Janssen3–11, 3–11 Runner-up
2000Cuba International Takako Ida2–11, 4–11 Runner-up
1999Irish International Miho Tanaka9–11, 5–11 Runner-up
1999Guatemala International Denyse Julien6–11, 10–13 Runner-up
1999Argentina International Kara Solmundson6–11, 6–11 Runner-up
1999Brazil International Kara Solmundson13–10, 11–9 Winner
1999Bulgarian International Elena Nozdran6–11, 8–11 Runner-up
1998Scottish International Margit Borg5–11, 3–11 Runner-up
1998Austrian International Carolien Glebbeek3–11, 12–9, 8–11 Runner-up

Women's doubles

BWF International Challenge tournament

BWF International Series tournament

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Players: Anu Nieminen. . 24 January 2018.
  2. News: SM-sulkapalloa 1980-1990-luvuilla . . 24 January 2018. Finnish.
  3. Web site: Anu Weckström . International Olympic Committee. 24 January 2018. 2016-06-22 .
  4. News: Sydney 2000 . Suomen Sulkapalloliitto . 24 January 2018 . Finnish . https://web.archive.org/web/20180124124907/https://tokyo.sulkapallo.fi/tokyo-team/suomalaisten-kisahistoria/sydney-2000/ . 24 January 2018 . dead .
  5. News: Badminton women's singles results . BBC Sport. 24 January 2018.
  6. News: Vanhasen kannustus ei auttanut Anu Niemistä . . 24 January 2018. Finnish.
  7. News: Lontoo 2012 . Suomen Sulkapalloliitto . 24 January 2018 . Finnish . https://web.archive.org/web/20180124131008/https://tokyo.sulkapallo.fi/tokyo-team/suomalaisten-kisahistoria/lontoo-2012/ . 24 January 2018 . dead .
  8. News: Anu Nieminen til Lillerød som cheftræner for ungdom . BadmintonBladet.dk . 24 January 2018. Danish.