Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Russia national badminton team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
National badminton team representing Russia
Russia
AssociationNational Badminton Federation of Russia (NBFR)
ConfederationBE (Europe)
PresidentSergey Shakhray
BWF ranking
Current rankingUnranked (2 January 2024)
Highest ranking9 (4 October 2012)
Sudirman Cup
Appearances15 (first in1993)
Best resultGroup stage
Thomas Cup
Appearances3 (first in2012)
Best resultQuarter-finals (2012)
Uber Cup
Appearances3 (first in2010)
Best resultQuarter-finals (2010)
European Mixed Team Championships
Appearances15 (first in 1994)
Best resultRunners-up (2017)
European Men's Team Championships
Appearances9 (first in2004)
Best resultSemi-finals (2020)
European Women's Team Championships
Appearances8 (first in2008)
Best resultRunners-up (2010,2014)

TheRussia national badminton team (Russian:Сборная России по бадминтону) represents Russia in internationalbadminton competitions. The team is organized by the National Badminton Federation of Russia (NBFR) located in Moscow. The NBFR became the sport's sole administrator when the Russian Badminton Federation (RBF) was dissolved by the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) in 2005.[1]

In light of the2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine,Badminton World Federation (BWF) banned Russian athletes and officials from tournaments. It also cancelled all BWF-sanctioned events in Russia, and banned all Russian national flags and symbols from being displayed at any BWF-sanctioned event.[2]

On August 29, 2023, BWF announced that Russian athletes will be allowed to compete as neutrals starting February 26, 2024.

Competitive record

[edit]

Thomas Cup

[edit]
YearResult
England1949Part of the Soviet Union
Colony of Singapore1952
Colony of Singapore1955
Colony of Singapore1958
Indonesia1961
Japan1964
Indonesia1967
Malaysia1970
Indonesia1973
Thailand1976
Indonesia1979
England1982
Malaysia1984
Indonesia1986
Malaysia1988
Japan1990
Malaysia1992Part of the CIS
Indonesia1994Did not qualify
Hong Kong1996
Hong Kong1998
Malaysia2000
China2002
Indonesia2004
Japan2006
Indonesia2008
Malaysia2010
China2012Quarter-finals
India2014Group stage
China2016Did not qualify
Thailand2018Group stage
Denmark2020Withdrew
Thailand2022Banned
China2024TBD
N/A2026TBD
N/A2028TBD
N/A2030TBD

Uber Cup

[edit]
YearResult
England1957Part of the Soviet Union
United States1960
United States1963
New Zealand1966
Japan1969
Japan1972
Indonesia1975
New Zealand1978
Japan1981
Malaysia1984
Indonesia1986
Malaysia1988
Japan1990
Malaysia1992Part of the CIS
Indonesia1994Did not qualify
Hong Kong1996
Hong Kong1998
Malaysia2000
China2002
Indonesia2004
Japan2006
Indonesia2008
Malaysia2010Quarter-finals
China2012Did not qualify
India2014Group stage
China2016Did not qualify
Thailand2018Group stage
Denmark2020Withdrew
Thailand2022Banned
China2024TBD
N/A2026TBD
N/A2028TBD
N/A2030TBD

Sudirman Cup

[edit]
YearResult
Indonesia1989Part of the Soviet Union
Denmark1991
England1993Group 3 Promoted− 11th
Switzerland1995Group 2 − 9th
Scotland1997Group 2 − 11th
Denmark1999Group 2 Relegated − 14th
Spain2001Group 3 − 18th
Netherlands2003Group 3 Promoted− 15th
China2005Group 2 − 15th
Scotland2007Group 2 − 15th
China2009Group 2 − 10th
China2011Group 1 − 11th
Malaysia2013Group 2 Promoted− 13th
China2015Group 1 − 12th
Australia2017Group 1 − 11th
China2019Group 1 − 10th
Finland2021Group stage − 11th
China2023Banned
China2025TBD
N/A2027TBD
N/A2029TBD

European Team Championships

[edit]
YearResult
Slovakia2004Quarter-finals
Greece2006Group stage
Netherlands2008Quarter-finals
Poland2010Quarter-finals
Netherlands2012Fourth place
Switzerland2014Quarter-finals
Russia2016Quarter-finals
Russia2018Quarter-finals
France20203rd place, bronze medalist(s) Semi-finals
Poland2024TBD
YearResult
Slovakia2004Quarter-finals
Greece2006Did not enter
Netherlands2008Quarter-finals
Poland20102nd place, silver medalist(s) Runners-up
Netherlands2012Fourth place
Switzerland20142nd place, silver medalist(s) Runners-up
Russia2016Quarter-finals
Russia20183rd place, bronze medalist(s) Semi-finals
France2020Quarter-finals
Poland2024TBD
YearResult
Sweden 1972Part of the Soviet Union
Austria 1974
Republic of Ireland 1976
England 1978
Netherlands 1980
West Germany 1982
England 1984
Sweden 1986
Norway 1988
Soviet Union 1990
Scotland 1992Part of the CIS
Netherlands 1994Fourth place
Denmark 1996Fourth place
Bulgaria 1998Group stage − 7th
Scotland 2000Group stage − 7th
Sweden 2002Group stage − 7th
Switzerland 2004Group stage − 6th
Netherlands 2006Group stage − 8th
Denmark2008Group stage − 6th
England20093rd place, bronze medalist(s) Semi-finals
Netherlands20113rd place, bronze medalist(s) Semi-finals
Russia20133rd place, bronze medalist(s) Semi-finals
Belgium20153rd place, bronze medalist(s) Semi-finals
Poland20172nd place, silver medalist(s) Runners-up
Denmark20193rd place, bronze medalist(s) Semi-finals
Finland20213rd place, bronze medalist(s) Semi-finals
France2023Banned
N/A2025TBD

FISU World University Games

[edit]
See also:Badminton at the FISU World University Games

Mixed team

[edit]
YearResult
Thailand2007Group stage
China2011Group stage
Russia2013Round of 16
South Korea2015Group stage
Chinese Taipei2017Quarter-finals
China2021Banned
Germany2025TBD

World University Team Championships

[edit]

Mixed team

[edit]
YearResult
Portugal 2008Quarter-finals
Chinese Taipei 2010Did not enter
South Korea 2012Quarter-finals
Spain 2014Group stage
Russia 20163rd place, bronze medalist(s) Semi-finals
Malaysia 2018Group stage
**Red border color indicates tournament was held on home soil.

Junior competitive record

[edit]

Suhandinata Cup

[edit]
See also:BWF World Junior Championships
YearResult
China2000Group stage −10th of 24
South Africa2002Group stage − 14th of 23
Canada2004Group X1 −10th of 20
South Korea2006Group Z2 − 12th of 28
New Zealand2007Group Z1 − 17th of 25
India2008Group Y − 14th of 21
Malaysia2009Group W − 11th of 21
Mexico2010Did not enter
Chinese Taipei2011Group Y1 −10th of 22
Japan2012Group X2 − 16th of 30
Thailand2013Group W2 − 13th of 30
Malaysia2014Group W2 − 14th of 33
Peru2015Did not enter
Spain2016Group B2 − 21st of 52
Indonesia2017Group A2 − 14th of 44
Canada2018Did not enter
Russia2019Group B − 19th of 43
Spain2022Banned
United States2023
N/A2024TBD

European Junior Team Championships

[edit]
See also:European Junior Badminton Championships

Mixed team

[edit]
YearResult
Denmark1975Part of the Soviet Union
Malta1977
West Germany1979
Scotland1981
Finland1983
Austria1985
Poland1987
England1989
Hungary1991
Bulgaria19933rd place, bronze medalist(s) Third place
Slovakia1995Did not enter
Czech Republic19972nd place, silver medalist(s)Runners-up
Scotland19992nd place, silver medalist(s)Runners-up
Poland20013rd place, bronze medalist(s) Third place
Denmark20033rd place, bronze medalist(s) Third place
Netherlands20052nd place, silver medalist(s)Runners-up
Germany2007Fourth place
Italy2009Quarter-finals
Finland20112nd place, silver medalist(s)Runners-up
Turkey2013Quarter-finals
Poland2015Quarter-finals
France20172nd place, silver medalist(s)Runners-up
Estonia20183rd place, bronze medalist(s) Semi-finalist
Finland20203rd place, bronze medalist(s) Semi-finalist
Serbia2022Banned
**Red border color indicates tournament was held on home soil.

Players

[edit]

Current squad

[edit]
As of 2 January 2024

Men's team

[edit]
NameDoB/AgeRanking of event
MSMDXD
Sergey Sirant (1994-04-12)12 April 1994 (age 31)---
Georgii Karpov (2001-07-17)17 July 2001 (age 24)---
Artur Pechenkin (2002-07-19)19 July 2002 (age 23)---
Vladislav Dobychkin (2003-08-01)1 August 2003 (age 22)---
Vladimir Ivanov (1987-07-03)3 July 1987 (age 38)---
Ivan Sozonov (1989-07-06)6 July 1989 (age 36)---
Konstantin Abramov (1992-05-16)16 May 1992 (age 33)---
Alexandr Zinchenko (1995-02-06)6 February 1995 (age 31)---
Egor Borisov (2004-06-18)18 June 2004 (age 21)---
Rodion Alimov (1998-04-21)21 April 1998 (age 27)---

Women's team

[edit]
NameDoB/AgeRanking of event
WSWDXD
Evgeniya Kosetskaya (1994-12-16)16 December 1994 (age 31)---
Mariia Golubeva (2004-05-26)26 May 2004 (age 21)---
Alina Busygina (2000-12-15)15 December 2000 (age 25)---
Elena Komendrovskaja (1991-05-19)19 May 1991 (age 34)---
Ekaterina Malkova (1992-12-12)12 December 1992 (age 33)---
Anastasia Redkina (1998-06-07)7 June 1998 (age 27)---
Ksenia Evgenova (1996-04-19)19 April 1996 (age 29)---
Anastasiia Boiarun (2003-10-06)6 October 2003 (age 22)---
Alena Iakovleva (2003-01-14)14 January 2003 (age 23)---
Alina Davletova (1998-07-17)17 July 1998 (age 27)---

Previous squads

[edit]

Sudirman Cup

[edit]

Thomas Cup

[edit]

Uber Cup

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"История бадминтона".Клуб любителей бадминтона БАДМКЛАБ (in Russian). Retrieved2023-09-30.
  2. ^"BWF cancels events in Russia, Belarus".New Straits Times. 28 February 2022. Retrieved1 March 2022.

External links

[edit]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Russia_national_badminton_team&oldid=1252989658"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp