Yuan Wemyss Explained

Yuan Wemyss
Birth Date:1976 1, df=yes
Birth Place:Wuhan, Hubei Province, China
Residence:Stirling, Scotland
Height:178 cm
Country:Scotland
Retired:in 2006
Handedness:Right
Coach:Dan Travers
Event:Women's singles & doubles
Bwf Id:7654D5F1-B005-4F9F-B4C5-F2AB7123A998

Yuan Wemyss (also known as Rita Yuan Gao, Yuan Gao and Rita Pickering; Chinese: 高源; born 14 January 1976) is a former Chinese-born Scottish badminton player who won Scottish National Championships for 13 times.[1]

Career

Wemyss was a bright sport prospect who formerly played at the regional level in China but never made it up to the national squad due to very tough competition. She temporarily left the sport in 1999 and began pursuing her another interest in learning English at the Carlisle College. In Carlisle, she met Scottish National badminton coach Dan Travers who in turn began supporting her for playing further Badminton and represent Scotland at international stage. She there got her nickname Rita, then after dubbed as Rita Yuan Gao.[2] She is also known as Yuan Gao.[3]

As of 2012, Yuan Gao moved to Zurich, Switzerland for part-time study of a Master of Philosophy in Sports Studies at the University of Stirling with a coaching role at Swiss Badminton. She also served as a Woman's ambassador in Badminton World Federation. In 2013, she competed in World Senior Championships also.[4] Currently she is acting as Performance and Development Coach of Badminton Scotland.[5] [6]

Family

Wemyss comes from Wuhan, a big industrial city in Central China located alongside Yangtze river. Her father was a football coach and her brother was a professional player of Hubei Province. Her mother was a former Army administrator.

Achievements

IBF World Grand Prix

The World Badminton Grand Prix sanctioned by International Badminton Federation (IBF) from 1983 to 2006.

Women's doubles

IBF International

Women's singles

YearTournamentOpponentScoreResult
2006Portugal International Anna Rice21–9 Winner
2005Miami International Anna Rice11–3, 11–5 Winner
2005Peru International Anna Rice2–11, 11–1, 11–5 Winner
2005Finnish International Susan Hughes8–11, 9–11 Runner-up
2005Portugal International Jeanine Cicognini7–11, 11–3, 11–8 Winner
2004Scottish International Jill Pittard11–4, 3–11, 13–10 Winner
2004Iceland International Susan Hughes7–11, 2–11 Runner-up
2004Norwegian International Petra Overzier1–11, 6–11 Runner-up
2000Irish International Elizabeth Cann9–11, 11–2, 11–5 Winner
2000New Zealand International Rhona Robertson3–11, 9–11 Runner-up

Women's doubles

YearTournamentPartnerOpponentScoreResult
2005Portugal International Petya Nedelcheva Kathrin Piotrowski
Sandra Marinello
15–8, 11–15, 2–15 Runner-up
2004Welsh International Petya Nedelcheva Katie Litherland
Julie Pike
17–14, 15–0 Winner
2004Norwegian International Michelle Douglas Liza Parker
Suzanne Rayappan
0–15, 15–13, 8–15 Runner-up
2002Iceland International Kirsteen McEwan Katrin Atladóttir
Drifa Hardardóttir
11–3, 11–4 Winner
2002Scottish International Kirsteen McEwan Nicole Grether
Juliane Schenk
Walkover Winner
2002Slovak International Kirsteen McEwan Natalia Gorodnicheva
Elena Sukhareva
11–5, 11–5 Winner
2001Scottish Open Sandra Watt Kirsteen McEwan
Susan Hughes
7–4, 7–0, 6–8, 7–0 Winner

Mixed doubles

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Profile:Rita Yuan Gao. Badminton World Federation. 19 September 2020.
  2. Web site: Veronica. Lee. Shuttle diplomacy. www.theguardian.com. 21 July 2002. 19 September 2020.
  3. Web site: Douglas. Lowe. Chance to see a special player still setting a perfect example. The Herald. 18 November 2006. 19 September 2020.
  4. Web site: World badminton ambassadorial call-up for Scottish student. University of Stirling. www.stir.ac.uk. 25 June 2012. 19 September 2020.
  5. Web site: Scotland's team for U17 European Championships. www.badmintoneurope.com. Badminton Scotland. 21 May 2019. 19 September 2020.
  6. Web site: Disability Badminton. 19 September 2020.