Badminton at the 1990 Asian Games – Mixed doubles

Mixed doubles
at the 1990 Asian Games
Venue Beijing Sports Complex
Dates October 2, 1990 (1990-10-02)–October 6, 1990 (1990-10-06)
Competitors 28 from 7 nations
Medalists
    South Korea
    Indonesia
    Indonesia
    China

The badminton mixed doubles tournament at the 1990 Asian Games in Beijing Sports Complex, Beijing, China took place from 2 October to 6 October.

The South Korea duo of Park Joo-bong and Chung Myung-hee won the gold in this tournament after beating an Indonesian pair in the final.

Schedule

All times are China Standard Time (UTC+08:00)

Date Time Event
Tuesday, 2 October 199013:001st round
Thursday, 4 October 199013:00Quarterfinals
Friday, 5 October 199013:00Semifinals
Saturday, 6 October 199013:00Final

Results

1st round Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
1  Park Joo-bong (KOR)
 Chung Myung-hee (KOR)
15 15
 Siripong Siripool (THA)
 Ladawan Mulasartsatorn (THA)
15 15  Siripong Siripool (THA)
 Ladawan Mulasartsatorn (THA)
7 8
 Tse Bun (HKG)
 Cheng Yin Sat (HKG)
1 3 1  Park Joo-bong (KOR)
 Chung Myung-hee (KOR)
15 15
3/4  Rudy Gunawan (INA)
 Rosiana Tendean (INA)
15 6 15 3/4  Rudy Gunawan (INA)
 Rosiana Tendean (INA)
9 4
 Wu Wenkai (CHN)
 Zhou Lei (CHN)
6 15 1 3/4  Rudy Gunawan (INA)
 Rosiana Tendean (INA)
15 15
 Shinji Matsuura (JPN)
 Kimiko Jinnai (JPN)
15 15  Shinji Matsuura (JPN)
 Kimiko Jinnai (JPN)
3 4
 Amer Islam (PAK)
 Afshan Shakeel (PAK)
6 2 1  Park Joo-bong (KOR)
 Chung Myung-hee (KOR)
15 7 15
 Zheng Yumin (CHN)
 Shi Fangjing (CHN)
15 15 2  Eddy Hartono (INA)
 Verawaty Fadjrin (INA)
7 15 3
 Pramote Teerawiwatana (THA)
 Penpanor Klangthamnium (THA)
6 0  Zheng Yumin (CHN)
 Shi Fangjing (CHN)
15 11 15
 Sung Han-kook (KOR)
 Chung So-young (KOR)
15 15  Sung Han-kook (KOR)
 Chung So-young (KOR)
8 15 5
3/4  Ng Pak Kum (HKG)
 Chui Mei Yin (HKG)
3 2  Zheng Yumin (CHN)
 Shi Fangjing (CHN)
16 12
 Ali Yar Baig (PAK)
 Ghazala Wadood (PAK)
6 3 2  Eddy Hartono (INA)
 Verawaty Fadjrin (INA)
18 15
 Koji Miya (JPN)
 Kazue Kanai (JPN)
15 15  Koji Miya (JPN)
 Kazue Kanai (JPN)
2 6
2  Eddy Hartono (INA)
 Verawaty Fadjrin (INA)
15 15

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.