Chor Hooi Yee

Chor Hooi Yee (born 4 May 1979) is a Malaysian former badminton player.[1] Chor was the women's doubles silver medalist at the 1998 Commonwealth Games in Kuala Lumpur partnered with Lim Pek Siah, also helped the team reached the final and clinched the silver medal.[2][3] Teamed-up with Chew Choon Eng in the mixed doubles, they claimed the gold medal at the 1999 Southeast Asian Games in Brunei.[4] She previously left the Badminton Association of Malaysia due to nagging injuries and her studies in 2001, and in 2004 she made a comeback to the national squad. Chor educated business in HELP University.[5] She now works as an executive committee member of Cheras club.[6]

Chor Hooi Yee
Personal information
CountryMalaysia
Born (1979-05-04) 4 May 1979
Height1.54 m (5 ft 1 in)
HandednessRight
EventWomen's & mixed doubles
BWF profile

Achievements

Commonwealth Games

Women's doubles

Year Venue Partner Opponent Score Result
1998 Kuala Lumpur Badminton Stadium,
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Lim Pek Siah Donna Kellogg
Joanne Goode
8–15, 6–15 Silver

Southeast Asian Games

Mixed doubles

Year Venue Partner Opponent Score Result
1999 Hassanal Bolkiah Sports Complex,
Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei
Chew Choon Eng Rozman Razak
Norhasikin Amin
12–15, 15–6, 15–7 Gold
1995 700th Anniversary Sport Complex,
Chiang Mai, Thailand
Roslin Hashim Tri Kusharjanto
Minarti Timur
1–15, 1–15 Bronze

Asian Junior Championships

Girls' doubles

Year Venue Partner Opponent Score Result
1997 Ninoy Aquino Stadium,
Manila, Philippines
Lim Pek Siah Yang Wei
Gao Ling
Silver

BWF Grand Prix (1 title, 1 runner-up)

The BWF Grand Prix has two levels: Grand Prix and Grand Prix Gold. It is a series of badminton tournaments, sanctioned by Badminton World Federation (BWF) since 2007. The World Badminton Grand Prix sanctioned by International Badminton Federation (IBF) since 1983.

Women's doubles

Year Tournament Partner Opponent Score Result
2005 Thessaloniki Grand Prix Lim Pek Siah Gail Emms
Donna Kellogg
14–17, 8–15 Runner-up
1999 Polish Open Ang Li Peng Victoria Evtushenko
Elena Nozdran
2–15, 15–13, 15–10 Winner

BWF International Challenge/Series (4 titles, 7 runners-up)

Women's doubles

Year Tournament Partner Opponent Score Result
2007 Bahrain Satellite Wong Wai See Shendy Puspa Irawati
Meiliana Jauhari
13–21, 14–21 Runner-up
2004 Irish International Lim Pek Siah Pernille Harder
Helle Nielsen
7–15, 6–15 Runner-up
2004 Scottish International Lim Pek Siah Kamila Augustyn
Nadieżda Kostiuczyk
8–15, 11–15 Runner-up
2004 Hungarian International Lim Pek Siah Agnese Allegrini
Hui Ding
15–4, 15–3 Winner
2004 Slovak International Lim Pek Siah Sarah Bok
Hayley Connor
15–2, 9–0 Retired Winner
2004 Australian International Lim Pek Siah Renuga Veeran
Susan Wang
15–13, 8–15, 12–15 Runner-up
2004 Western Australia International Fong Chew Yen Noriko Okuma
Miyuki Tai
7–15, 11–15 Runner-up
1999 Singapore Satellite Ang Li Peng Angeline De Pauw
Eny Widiowati
15–13, 8–15, 15–5 Winner
1999 French International Ang Li Peng Qin Yiyuan
Gao Ling
0–15, 3–15 Runner-up
1999 Malaysia Satellite Ang Li Peng Sathinee Chankrachangwong
Thitikan Duangsiri
5–15, 10–15 Runner-up

Mixed doubles

Year Tournament Partner Opponent Score Result
2003 Australian International Ng Kean Kok Ong Ewe Hock
Sutheaswari Mudukasan
15–9, 15–13 Winner
     BWF International Challenge tournament
     BWF International Series tournament
     BWF Future Series tournament
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gollark: But people may not run their own server.
gollark: Arguably you don't need it that much if you can run your own server and there are TLS links between things anyway.
gollark: I mean, *bad* E2E would be easy as I'd want clients to have a set of keys for signing messages and such anyway, but no.

References

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