Tasnim Mir | |
Country: | India |
Birth Date: | 2005 5, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Mehsana, Gujarat, India |
Height: | 1.67 m |
Years Active: | 2021–present |
Handedness: | Right |
Event: | Women's singles |
Career Record: | 99 wins, 33 losses |
Highest Ranking: | 49 |
Date Of Highest Ranking: | 13 June 2023 |
Current Ranking: | 71 |
Date Of Current Ranking: | 26 November 2024 |
Bwf Id: | FAC2C822-E1D1-4FED-8F6C-A64F5DABD146 |
Tasnim Mir (born 13 May 2005) is an Indian badminton player.[1] She is a former BWF World Junior Number 1.[2] [3]
Mir was born in Mehsana, where her father Irfan Ali Mir worked in the police department. He was also a badminton coach, and introduced Mir to the sport when she was seven or eight years old.[4] When twelve, she stopped attending daily classes in school to focus on badminton training.[5]
Mir won the U-15 singles and doubles titles at national sub-junior tournaments in Hyderabad and Nagpur in January and July 2018 respectively. In October of that year, she again won an U15 title and then the U17 title as well.[6] The following year, she broke through the domestic junior ranks by winning the national U-19 girls' title while still 14 years of age. In 2018, Mir also played her first international event, the Badminton Asia Junior U17 and U15 Championships, in Mandalay, Myanmar. While she lost in the quarter-finals in the U15 singles event, she partnered Meghana Reddy to win the gold in the U15 doubles.
In 2019, she excelled at the Badminton Asia Junior U17 and U15 Championships held in Surabaya, Indonesia, winning the U15 singles crown. Besides, she won the singles and mixed doubles titles in the Dubai Junior International Series, and got to the quarter-final stage of the Korea Junior Open International Challenge.[7]
In 2020, she earned a bronze at the Dutch Junior International.
Mir represented India at the 2020 Thomas & Uber Cup held in October 2021 in Aarhus, Denmark. She won one and lost one of her two singles matches in the group stage.[8]
Mir claimed the women's title at the India International Challenge badminton tournament in Raipur, Chhattisgarh in September 2022, upsetting several seeded players on her path to the win.[9]
Mir trained briefly at the Gopichand Badminton Academy in 2018, before making the move to Guwahati where she is coached by Edwin Iriawan at the Assam Badminton Academy.[10]
Women's singles
Year | Tournament | Opponent | Score | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | Iran Fajr International | Yulia Yosephine Susanto | 21–11, 11–21, 21–7 | Winner | |
2022 (II) | India International Challenge | ![]() | 14–21, 21–17, 21–11 | Winner | |
2023 | Iran Fajr International | ![]() | 7–21, 11–21 | Runner-up | |
2023 | Maldives International | ![]() | 21–19, 17–21, 11–21 | Runner-up | |
2023 (II) | India International | ![]() | 18–21, 10–21 | Runner-up | |
2024 | Iran Fajr International | ![]() | 14–21, 12–21 | Runner-up | |
2024 | Réunion Open | ![]() | 21–15, 21–19 | Winner |
BWF International Challenge tournament
BWF International Series tournament
BWF Future Series tournament
Girls' singles
Year | Tournament | Opponent | Score | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | Dubai Junior International | ![]() | 21–15, 21–19 | Winner | |
2020 | Nepal Junior International | Letshanaa Karupathevan | 21–17, 21–14 | Winner | |
2021 | Bulgarian Junior International | ![]() | 21–10, 21–12 | Winner | |
2021 | Alpes Junior International | ![]() | 21–14, 21–14 | Winner | |
2021 | Belgian Junior International | Antonia Schaller | 21–10, 21–11 | Winner |
Mixed doubles
Year | Tournament | Partner | Opponent | Score | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | Dubai Junior International | ![]() | Galuh Dwi Putra Zainaba Reem Siraj | 21–16, 22–24, 21–19 | Winner | |
2020 | Nepal Junior International | ![]() | ![]() ![]() | 17–21, 14–21 | Runner-up |
BWF Junior International Grand Prix tournament
BWF Junior International Challenge tournament
BWF Junior International Series tournament
BWF Junior Future Series tournament
Tournament | Best | Ref | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | |||||||||
align=left | German Open | A | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R | A | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R ('23) | ||
align=left | Orléans Masters | A | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R | A | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R ('23) | ||
align=left | Australian Open | A | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R | A | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R ('23) | ||
align=left | Indonesia Masters Super 100 | A | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R ('24) | |||
align=left | Korea Open | A | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R | A | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R ('23) | ||
align=left | Vietnam Open | A | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R ('23, '24) | |
align=left | Macau Open | NH | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 2R | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 2R ('24) | |||
align=left | Syed Modi International | A | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R | bgcolor=FFEBCD | QF | bgcolor=FFEBCD | QF ('24) | [11] |
align=left | Guwahati Masters | style=color:#ccc | NH | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 1R ('23) | ||
align=left | Odisha Masters | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 2R | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 2R | bgcolor=AFEEEE | 2R ('22, '23) | ||
align=left | Year-end ranking | 2022; | 54 | 2023; | 73 | 2024; | Best; | 49 | |
Tournament | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | Best |