Badminton at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Men's doubles explained

Event:Men's doubles
Games:2020 Summer
Venue:Musashino Forest Sport Plaza
Dates:24–31 July 2021
Competitors:32 (16 pairs)
Nations:14
Gold:Lee Yang
Wang Chi-lin
Goldnoc:TPE
Silver:Li Junhui
Liu Yuchen
Silvernoc:CHN
Bronze:Aaron Chia
Soh Wooi Yik
Bronzenoc:MAS
Prev:2016 Rio
Next:2024 Paris

The men's doubles badminton tournament at the 2020 Summer Olympics took place from 24 to 31 July at the Musashino Forest Sport Plaza at Tokyo. There were 16 pairs from 14 nations competing.

Background

This was the 8th appearance of the event as a full medal event. Badminton was introduced as a demonstration sport in 1972, held again as an exhibition sport in 1988, and added to the full programme in 1992; the men's doubles tournament has been held since.[1]

The reigning champions were Fu Haifeng and Zhang Nan of China, who were not defending their title. Fu retired after the 2016 Games, having reached three consecutive finals with two different partners (Zhang and Cai Yun) and winning two gold medals and a silver medal. The top two qualifying teams were both from Indonesia: Marcus Fernaldi Gideon/Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo and Mohammad Ahsan/Hendra Setiawan. The latter pair were also reigning world champions from the 2019 BWF World Championships.

Qualification

See main article: Badminton at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Qualification.

The badminton qualification system provided for 16 men's doubles teams (32 players). Following revisions due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the qualifying periods were set from 29 April 2019 to 15 March 2020 and from 4 January to 13 June 2021, with the ranking list of 15 June 2021 deciding 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 was 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 the knockout stage.[2] The knockout stage was a three-round single-elimination tournament with a bronze medal match.[3]

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.[3]

Seeds

  1. (quarter-finals)
  2. (fourth place)
  3. (silver medalists)
  4. (quarter-finals)

Schedule

The tournament was held over an 8-day period, with 7 competition days and 1 open day.[4] [5]

PPreliminariesQFQuarter-finalsSFSemi-finalsMMedal matches
Date 24 Jul 25 Jul 26 Jul 27 Jul 28 Jul 29 Jul 30 Jul 31 Jul 1 Aug 2 Aug
Event M E M E M E M E M E M E M A M E A E A E
Men's doubles P QF SF M

Group stage

Group A

DateTimePair 1ScorePair 2Set 1Set 2Set 3
24 July 12:20Marcus Fernaldi Gideon
Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo
2–0 Ben Lane
Sean Vendy
21–15 21–11
1–2 Satwiksairaj Rankireddy
Chirag Shetty
16–21 21–16 25–27
26 July 11:20Lee Yang
Wang Chi-lin
2–0 Ben Lane
Sean Vendy
21–17 21–14
12:40Marcus Fernaldi Gideon
Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo
2–0 Satwiksairaj Rankireddy
Chirag Shetty
21–13 21–12
27 July 12:001–2 Lee Yang
Wang Chi-lin
18–21 21–15 17–21
Satwiksairaj Rankireddy
Chirag Shetty
2–0 Ben Lane
Sean Vendy
21–17 21–19

Group B

DateTimePair 1ScorePair 2Set 1Set 2Set 3
24 July 13:00Kim Astrup
Anders Skaarup Rasmussen
2–0 Vladimir Ivanov
Ivan Sozonov
21–13 21–18
20:00Hiroyuki Endo
Yuta Watanabe
2–0 Godwin Olofua
Anuoluwapo Juwon Opeyori
21–2 21–7
25 July 12:40Hiroyuki Endo
Yuta Watanabe
2–0 Vladimir Ivanov
Ivan Sozonov
21–19 21–19
26 July 18:00Kim Astrup
Anders Skaarup Rasmussen
2–0 Godwin Olofua
Anuoluwapo Juwon Opeyori
21–7 21–10
27 July 11:20Hiroyuki Endo
Yuta Watanabe
2–0 Kim Astrup
Anders Skaarup Rasmussen
21–14 21–12
18:40Vladimir Ivanov
Ivan Sozonov
2–0 Godwin Olofua
Anuoluwapo Juwon Opeyori
21–8 21–10

Group C

DateTimePair 1ScorePair 2Set 1Set 2Set 3
24 July 11:00Li Junhui
Liu Yuchen
2–0 Phillip Chew
Ryan Chew
21–9 21–17
19:20Takeshi Kamura
Keigo Sonoda
2–0 Mark Lamsfuß
Marvin Seidel
21–13 21–8
25 July 18:40Li Junhui
Liu Yuchen
2–0 Mark Lamsfuß
Marvin Seidel
21–14 21–13
26 July 10:00Takeshi Kamura
Keigo Sonoda
2–0 Phillip Chew
Ryan Chew
21–11 21–3
27 July 10:00Li Junhui
Liu Yuchen
2–0 Takeshi Kamura
Keigo Sonoda
21–14 21–16
18:00Mark Lamsfuß
Marvin Seidel
2–0 Phillip Chew
Ryan Chew
21–10 21–16

Group D

DateTimePair 1ScorePair 2Set 1Set 2Set 3
24 July 18:00Mohammad Ahsan
Hendra Setiawan
2–0 Jason Ho-Shue
Nyl Yakura
21–12 21–11
Choi Sol-gyu
Seo Seung-jae
0–2 Aaron Chia
Soh Wooi Yik
22–24 15–21
25 July 10:00Choi Sol-gyu
Seo Seung-jae
2–0 Jason Ho-Shue
Nyl Yakura
21–14 21–8
26 July 19:20Mohammad Ahsan
Hendra Setiawan
2–0 Aaron Chia
Soh Wooi Yik
21–16 21–19
27 July 12:40Mohammad Ahsan
Hendra Setiawan
2–1 Choi Sol-gyu
Seo Seung-jae
21–12 19–21 21–18
20:00Aaron Chia
Soh Wooi Yik
2–0 Jason Ho-Shue
Nyl Yakura
21–15 21–13

Finals

The quarter-finals were held on 29 July 2021, the semi-finals on the next day, and the medal matches on 31 July 2021.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Badminton – The Olympic Journey. 24 July 2021. Badminton World Federation.
  2. Web site: Tokyo 2020 will be the eighth time badminton was being held as an Olympic medal sport. . 1 March 2021. live . https://web.archive.org/web/20160724214438/http://olympics.bwfbadminton.com:80/about/ . 24 July 2016 .
  3. Web site: Everything you need to know about Olympic Badminton at Tokyo 2020 . Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games . 23 June 2021 . 23 June 2021 . 24 June 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210624215110/https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/en/news/everything-you-need-to-know-about-olympic-badminton-at-tokyo-2020 . dead .
  4. Web site: Schedule - Badminton Tokyo 2020 Olympics . Olympian Database . 24 February 2020.
  5. Web site: Badminton Competition Schedule . . 1 March 2020.
  6. Web site: Badminton Men's Doubles - Bracket Results . Olympics.com . Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games . 28 July 2021 . 28 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210728135512/https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/olympic-games/en/results/badminton/bracket-men-s-doubles.htm . dead .