Stanislav Pukhov Explained

Stanislav Pukhov
Birth Name:Stanislav Yevgenyevich
Pukhov
Birth Date:1977 6, df=yes
Birth Place:Moscow, Russian SFSR
Weight:800NaN0
Highest Ranking:48
Current Ranking:230
Date Of Current Ranking:21 February 2013
Bwf Id:0AF005F4-992C-4AEF-88FD-0038E6B8D16B

Stanislav Yevgenyevich Pukhov (Russian: Станислав Евгеньевич Пухов; born 28 June 1977 in Moscow) is a Russian badminton player.[1] He is a five-time national champion in the men's singles (1998, 2001, 2003, 2005, and 2007), and also, defeated France's Arif Rasidi for the championship title and a consolation prize of $10,000 in the same division at the 2005 French Open in Paris.[2]

Pukhov qualified for the men's singles at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, after he was ranked sixtieth in the world by the Badminton World Federation. He received a bye for the second preliminary round before losing out to Lithuania's Kęstutis Navickas, with a score of 12–21 and 17–21.[3]

Achievements

BWF Grand Prix (1 title, 2 runners-up)

The BWF Grand Prix has two level such as Grand Prix and Grand Prix Gold. It is a series of badminton tournaments, sanctioned by Badminton World Federation (BWF) since 2007. The World Badminton Grand Prix sanctioned by International Badminton Federation (IBF) since 1983.

Men's singles

YearTournamentOpponentScoreResult
2010Russian Open Takuma Ueda17–21, 17–21 Runner-up
2008Russian Open Dicky Palyama12–21, 18–21 Runner-up
2005Russian Open Vladimir Malkov3–15, 15–6, 15–8 Winner

BWF Grand Prix Gold tournament

BWF & IBF Grand Prix tournament

BWF International Challenge/Series (13 titles, 7 runners-up)

Men's singles

YearTournamentOpponentScoreResult
2010Lao International Tommy Sugiarto19–21, 13–21 Runner-up
2009White Nights Dmytro Zavadsky0–21, 0–21 disq. Runner-up
2008Italian International Wong Choong Hann16–21, 15–21 Runner-up
2007White Nights Bobby Milroy24–22, 11–21, 21–19 Winner
2005French International Arif Rasidi15–12, 15–3 Winner
2004Russian International Evgenij Dremin15–5, 17–16 Winner
2004Portugal International Przemysław Wacha11–15, 15–3, 15–9 Winner
2002Hungarian International Aamir Ghaffar15–13, 4–15, 15–6 Winner
2002Slovak International Jacek Niedźwiedzki15–5, 11–15, 15–7 Winner
2002Bulgarian International Kasperi Salo15–3, 15–12 Winner
1997Bulgarian International Joris van Soerland9–10, 9–0, 9–6, 7–9, 9–7 Winner

Men's doubles

YearTournamentPartnerOpponentScoreResult
2014Lithuanian International Sergey Sirant Denis Grachev
Artem Karpov
Walkover Runner-up
2003Spanish International Nikolai Zuyev Michael Lamp
Mathias Boe
4–15, 9–15 Runner-up
2003Austrian International Nikolai Zuyev Michał Łogosz
Robert Mateusiak
6–15, 17–16, 11–15 Runner-up
2003French International Nikolai Zuyev Joachim Fischer Nielsen
Carsten Mogensen
13–15, 9–15 Runner-up
2002Welsh International Nikolai Zuyev Peter Jeffrey
Julian Robertson
15–3, 15–11 Winner
2002Hungarian International Nikolai Zuyev Evgenij Isakov
Andrej Zholobov
15–17, 15–3, 15–5 Winner
2002Slovak International Nikolai Zuyev Michał Łogosz
Robert Mateusiak
15–10, 8–15, 15–12 Winner
2002Bulgarian International Nikolai Zuyev Evgenij Isakov
Andrej Zholobov
15–5, 15–9 Winner
2001Slovenian International Nikolai Zuyev Wouter Claes
Frédéric Mawet
7–2, 1–7, 7–5, 7–3 Winner

BWF International Challenge tournament

BWF International Series tournament

BWF Future Series tournament

External links

Notes and References

  1. Stanislav Pukhov. https://web.archive.org/web/20200417220449/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/pu/stanislav-pukhov-1.html. dead. 17 April 2020. 23 February 2013.
  2. News: Sachetat. Raphael. Europe Cup – Local favourites bow to talented Russians. Badzine. 2 July 2007. 23 February 2013.
  3. Web site: Men's Singles Round of 32. NBC Olympics. 23 February 2013.