Sawan Serasinghe Explained

Sawan Serasinghe
Birth Date:1994 2, df=yes
Birth Place:Galle, Sri Lanka
Height:1.78 m
Weight:79 kg
Residence:Melbourne, Australia
Handedness:Left
Event:Men's & mixed doubles
Highest Ranking:32 (MD 1 December 2016)
32 (XD 19 October 2017)
Bwf Id:B631B226-D382-4225-A9E6-844C5842C9AB

Sawan Serasinghe (born 21 February 1994) is a former badminton player from Australia.[1] He won seven Oceania Championships titles, five in the men's doubles and two in the mixed doubles. Serasinghe competed in the men's doubles event at the 2016 Summer Olympics alongside Matthew Chau.[2]

Career

Serasinghe started playing badminton since the age of five, he was born in Galle, Sri Lanka, and moved to Australia when he was 11 years old. He trains at the National Training Centre in Melbourne, and took out back-to-back Oceania Championships titles with Chau in 2015 and 2016. The 22-year-old also won the 2014 Sydney International Challenge mixed doubles with Setyana Mapasa, against some of the best players in the world. The Melburnian's first international experience was at the 2013 Australian Youth Olympic Festival where he competed in the men's doubles with Chau and also took the court in the men's singles competition.[3]

He made his first Olympic appearance at the 2016 Summer Olympics, competing in the men's doubles with Matthew Chau. They headed into Rio as the 46th highest ranked pairing in the world, and were eliminated in the group stages after losing each of their matches against South Korea, Russia, and Chinese Taipei.[3] [4]

Off the court, Serasinghe holds a Bachelor of Business Information Systems degree from Monash University.[3]

Achievements

Oceania Championships

Men's doubles

YearVenuePartnerOpponentScoreResult
2020Ken Kay Badminton Stadium,
Ballarat, Australia
Matthew Chau Oliver Leydon-Davis
Abhinav Manota
21–18, 9–21, 14–21 Silver
2019Melbourne Sports and Aquatic Centre,
Melbourne, Australia
Eric Vuong Simon Leung
Mitchell Wheller
21–17, 21–10 Gold
2018Eastlink Badminton Stadium,
Hamilton, New Zealand
Matthew Chau Robin Middleton
Ross Smith
21–17, 23–21 Gold
2017Salle Anewy,
Nouméa, New Caledonia
Matthew Chau Kevin Dennerly-Minturn
Niccolo Tagle
21–8, 21–14 Gold
2016Punaauia University Hall,
Papeete, Tahiti
Matthew Chau Leo Cucuel
Remi Rossi
21–11, 21–12 Gold
2015X-TRM North Harbour Badminton Centre,
Auckland, New Zealand
Matthew Chau Kevin Dennerly-Minturn
Oliver Leydon-Davis
10–21, 21–16, 21–13 Gold
2014Ken Kay Badminton Hall,
Ballarat, Australia
Matthew Chau Raymond Tam
Glenn Warfe
11–21, 13–21 Silver

Mixed doubles

YearVenuePartnerOpponentScoreResult
2019Melbourne Sports and Aquatic Centre,
Melbourne, Australia
Khoo Lee Yen Simon Leung
Gronya Somerville
18–21, 15–21 Silver
2018Eastlink Badminton Stadium,
Hamilton, New Zealand
Setyana Mapasa Matthew Chau
Leanne Choo
21–19, 21–18 Gold
2017Salle Anewy,
Nouméa, New Caledonia
Setyana Mapasa Joel Findlay
Gronya Somerville
21–19, 21–9 Gold

BWF Grand Prix (1 runner-up)

The BWF Grand Prix has two levels, the BWF Grand Prix and Grand Prix Gold. It is a series of badminton tournaments sanctioned by the Badminton World Federation (BWF) since 2007.

Mixed doubles

BWF Grand Prix Gold tournament

BWF Grand Prix tournament

BWF International Challenge/Series (6 titles, 3 runners-up)

Men's doubles

YearTournamentPartnerOpponentScoreResult
2017Nouméa International Matthew Chau Joel Findlay
Jeff Tho
17–21, 21–7, 21–14 Winner
2015Maribyrnong International Matthew Chau Darren Isaac Devadass
Vountus Indra Mawan
24–22, 10–21, 14–21 Runner-up
2015Waikato International Matthew Chau Rizwan Azam
Michael Fariman
21–16, 21–15 Winner

Mixed doubles

YearTournamentPartnerOpponentScoreResult
2017Sydney International Setyana Mapasa Ye Hong-wei
Teng Chun-hsun
Walkover Runner-up
2017Nouméa International Setyana Mapasa Dylan Soedjasa
Susannah Leydon-Davis
21–13, 15–21, 21–17 Winner
2015Norwegian International Setyana Mapasa Soren Gravholt
Maiken Fruergaard
21–17, 21–15 Winner
2015Maribyrnong International Setyana Mapasa Robin Middleton
Leanne Choo
21–17, 19–21, 19–21 Runner-up
2015Waikato International Setyana Mapasa Matthew Chau
Gronya Somerville
21–13, 21–17 Winner
2014Sydney International Setyana Mapasa Pham Tran Hoang
Sylvina Kurniawan
11–4, 11–8, 11–3 Winner

BWF International Challenge tournament

BWF International Series tournament

BWF Future Series tournament

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Players: Sawan Serasinghe . bwfbadminton.com . . 11 February 2017.
  2. News: Australian badminton champion makes Olympic debut . www.australiaplus.com . . 11 February 2017.
  3. Web site: Sawan Serasinghe . . . 11 February 2017 . 25 February 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170225160255/http://rio2016.olympics.com.au/athlete/sawan-serasinghe . dead .
  4. News: Aussie Badminton star celebrates end of months of clean eating with Olympian McDonald's meal . metro.co.uk . . 11 February 2017.