Conventional wisdom dictates that the average retirement age for elite female players in the intense and physically demanding sport of badminton is well under 30 years old.
Five female shuttlers are set to turn that on its head when they make their fourth Olympic appearances at the Paris Games, a feat never accomplished before.
Taiwan’s Tai Tzu-ying, 30, Thailand’s Ratchanok Intanon, 29, Belgium’s Lianne Tan, 33, and Hong Kong’s Tse Ying Suet and Canada’s Michelle Li, both 32, are to compete for Olympic glory at Porte de La Chapelle Arena from Saturday to Aug. 5.
Photo: AP
“These achievements get missed because they’re women,” said Nora Perry, two-time world champion and a BWF council member. “It’s not taken as seriously. When men do something extraordinary, it’s celebrated and comes out on front pages.”
Women have had to fight tooth-and-nail to compete at the Olympics, and some sports and events were barred to them even as recently as the Tokyo Games.
Badminton has done well in comparison on the gender equality front, with Indonesia’s Susi Susanti beating South Korean shuttler Bang Soo-hyun to singles gold when it first became a medal sport at the Barcelona Games in 1992.
Four years later, in Atlanta, female shuttlers were pitted against men in mixed doubles matches, something tennis had yet to do at the time.
The Paris Games would be the first to feature an equal number of male and female athletes, but even in badminton, the relationship between the federation and female shuttlers has not always been smooth sailing.
Ahead of the 2012 London Olympics, BWF officials drew criticism after imposing a rule requiring female players to wear skirts to make the sport more “feminine” and “attractive” to fans and sponsors.
Predictably, the rule change sparked a massive outcry and the BWF hastily backtracked before the Games began.
Of the veteran female shuttlers in Paris, Tokyo silver medalist Tai has the best shot at a podium finish.
Tai, who also competed at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro in 2016 and London 2012, is fifth in the BWF’s rankings of players who have qualified for Paris.
This year would be her final Games after she announced that she would retire at the end of the year.
While the former world No. 1 is hoping to make one last push for gold, she has been plagued by injuries in the past few months after a promising start to the year and faces a tough draw.
“I believe only gold matters to [Tai], now that she has won a silver, but the situation is completely different from three years ago and it is going to be extremely hard for her to achieve it,” Taiwanese sports commentator Chen Kai said.
Ratchanok at No. 12, is no slouch either, and two places above India’s PV Sindhu, herself a two-time Olympic medalist. The Thai came fifth in Tokyo, ninth in Rio and fifth in London.
“To achieve that with that four-year gap each time and come out of it without a serious injury and compete at that highest, highest level is amazing,” Perry said.
Badminton’s combination of sprinting, lunging, jumping and split second directional changes, all executed on a hard playing surface, make the sport exceptionally tough on its athletes, with ankle, knee, back, wrist and shoulder injuries all commonplace.
Tan is Belgium’s first female badminton Olympian and was 21 years old when she embarked on her Olympic journey in London.
Since then, she has studied dentistry, got married and represented her country at the Rio and Tokyo Olympics.
Her brother, Yuhan Tan, also represented Belgium at two Games, with the siblings introduced to the sport by their Indonesian father.
“It’s really special to see my name with the other four,” said Lianne Tan, who would face Tai and Intanon in the group stage.
“A lot has changed. I was very young and inexperienced,” she added. “It was so special to go to my first Olympics together with my brother. I know more now — what’s important in life — and I think that helps me enjoy the Games more and prepare better.”
Additional reporting by staff writer, with CNA
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