Dutch International

The Dutch International is an open international badminton tournament held in the Netherlands. The tournament annually held in Wateringen and organized by the VELO badminton since 2000. The Dutch International is a part of the European Badminton Circuit and graded as BWF International Series level.[1] This tournament is the second largest badminton event in the Netherlands with a total price money of $10.000.

Dutch International
SportBadminton
Founded2000
FounderVELO badminton
CountryNetherlands
Official websitewww.dutch-international.nl

Previous winners

The table below gives an overview of the winners at the Dutch International since 2000.[2]

Year Men's singles Women's singles Men's doubles Women's doubles Mixed doubles
2000 Vladislav Druzchenko Lonneke Janssen Mihail Popov
Svetoslav Stoyanov
Satomi Igawa
Hiroko Nagamine
Mathias Boe
Karina Sørensen
2001 Przemysław Wacha Yao Jie Mathias Boe
Thomas Hovgaard
Nicole van Hooren
Erica van den Heuvel
Chris Bruil
Lotte Jonathans
2002 Björn Joppien Brenda Beenhakker John Gordon
Daniel Shirley
Carina Mette
Juliane Schenk
Peter Jeffrey
Suzanne Rayappan
2003 Arif Rasidi Kamila Augustyn Rasmus Andersen
Carsten Mogensen
Majken Vange
Helle Nielsen
Peter Steffensen
Helle Nielsen
2004 Björn Joppien Petra Overzier Jean-Michel Lefort
Svetoslav Stoyanov
Petya Nedelcheva
Nely Boteva
Svetoslav Stoyanov
Victoria Wright
2005 Petya Nedelcheva Ingo Kindervater
Kristof Hopp
Nicole Grether
Juliane Schenk
Fredrik Bergström
Johanna Persson
2006 Petra Overzier Kristof Hopp
Birgit Overzier
2007 Wu Yunyong Kati Tolmoff Kristian Roebuck
Andrew Bowman
Paulien van Dooremalen
Rachel van Cutsen
Robin Middleton
Liza Parker
2008 Hans-Kristian Vittinghus Larisa Griga Kristof Hopp
Ingo Kindervater
Kamila Augustyn
Nadieżda Kostiuczyk
Rasmus Bonde
Helle Nielsen
2009 Dicky Palyama Juliane Schenk Mads Conrad-Petersen
Mads Pieler Kolding
Line Damkjær Kruse
Mie Schjøtt-Kristensen
Johannes Schöttler
Birgit Overzier
2010 Rune Ulsing Karina Jørgensen Samantha Barning
Eefje Muskens
Anders Skaarup Rasmussen
Anne Skelbæk
2011 Hans-Kristian Vittinghus Susan Egelstaff Baptiste Carême
Sylvain Grosjean
Valeria Sorokina
Nina Vislova
Aleksandr Nikolaenko
Valeria Sorokina
2012 Andre Kurniawan Tedjono Yao Jie Nelson Heg Wei Keat
Teo Ee Yi
Lotte Bruil
Paulien van Dooremalen
Robert Mateusiak
Nadieżda Zięba
2013 Viktor Axelsen Beatriz Corrales Łukasz Moreń
Wojciech Szkudlarczyk
Rie Eto
Yu Wakita
Michael Fuchs
Birgit Michels
2014 Rasmus Fladberg Soraya de Visch Eijbergen Kasper Antonsen
Mikkel Delbo Larsen
Samantha Barning
Iris Tabeling
Niclas Nøhr
Sara Thygesen
2015 Anders Antonsen Lianne Tan Kasper Antonsen
Oliver Babic
Gayle Mahulette
Cheryl Seinen
Kasper Antonsen
Amanda Madsen
2016 Pablo Abian Yvonne Li Alexander Bond
Joel Eipe
Chloe Birch
Sophie Brown
Alexander Bond
Ditte Søby Hansen
2017 Anand Pawar Irina Amalie Andersen Oliver Leydon-Davis
Lasse Mølhede
Cisita Joity Jansen
Birgit Overzier
Anton Kaisti
Jenny Nystrom
2018 Cheam June Wei Julie Dawall Jakobsen Arun George
Sanyam Shukla
Chang Ya-lan
Cheng Wen-hsing
Delphine Delrue
Thom Gicquel
2019 Harsheel Dani Line Christophersen Daniel Lundgaard
Mathias Thyrri
Amalie Magelund
Freja Ravn
Mathias Thyrri
Elisa Melgaard
2020 Cancelled[note 1]
  1. This tournament, originally to be played from 8 to 11 April, was later cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic in the Netherlands.[3]

Performances by nation

Top Nations
Pos Nation MS WS MD WD XD Total
1  Denmark 6 4 8.5 3 8 29.5
2  Germany 4 4 3 4 3 18
3  Netherlands 1 5 6 1 13
4  France 1 2 2 5
 Poland 1 1 1 1 1 5
6  England 0.5 1 2 3.5
7  Bulgaria 1 1 1 3
 India 2 1 3
9  Japan 2 2
 Malaysia 1 1 2
 Russia 1 1 2
 Spain 1 1 2
 Ukraine 1 1 2
14  New Zealand 1.5 1.5
 Scotland 1 0.5 1.5
16  Belgium 1 1
 China 1 1
 Chinese Taipei 1 1
 Estonia 1 1
 Finland 1 1
 Indonesia 1 1
 Sweden 1 1
Total 20 20 20 20 20 100

Erik Meijs Award

In memory of Erik Meijs the organization has created an Erik Meijs Award to the Most Sportsman Player of the Tournament.[4] Erik Meijs was the 2016 Dutch National Champion who died after being involved in a tragic traffic accident in German in November 2017.[4][5]

YearWinner
2018 Toby Penty
2019 Mathias Thyrri
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See also

Note

    References

    1. "Twintig jaar VELO Dutch International". velo-badminton.nl (in Dutch). 8 April 2019. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
    2. "History". www.dutch-international.nl. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
    3. "BWF Announces Revamped Tournament Calendar for 2020". bwfbadminton.com. Badminton World Federation. 25 May 2020. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
    4. "Erik Meijs Award". www.dutch-international.nl. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
    5. Bech, Rasmus (17 November 2017). "Badminton mourns the loss of Erik Meijs". www.badmintoneurope.com. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
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