Indonesia national badminton team

The Indonesia national badminton team represents Indonesia in international badminton team competitions and is controlled by the Persatuan Bulutangkis Seluruh Indonesia, PBSI (English: Indonesian Badminton Federation/Badminton Association of Indonesia, literally meaning: Entire Indonesia Badminton Federation), the governing body for badminton in Indonesia. The Indonesian team has not been absent from the Thomas Cup tournament (world men's team championship) since it first entered and won the competition in 1958.

Taufik Hidayat, 2004 Olympic gold medalist in badminton men's singles.
Indonesian postage stamp, 1961
Indonesia National Badminton Team
AbbreviationPBSI
TypeNational Sport Associationc
HeadquartersJakarta
Location
Chairman
Wiranto
AffiliationsBAC, BWF
Websitebadmintonindonesia.org

The Indonesia men's team has participated in Thomas Cup 27 times, won the title 13 times and never failed to qualify for inter-zone competition. Indonesia has played in the decisive final tie on 19 occasions and never failed to place among the top four teams, except in 2012.

The Indonesia women's team has participated in Uber Cup 24 times, won the title 3 times and once failed to qualify in 2006. Indonesia has played in the decisive final tie on 10 occasions.

The Indonesia mixed team has won Sudirman Cup only once in 1989.

Badminton World Team Ranking

BWF World Team Rankings
as of 1 October 2019[1][2]
#CountryConfederationPoints
1  China BAC 12,500
2  Japan BAC 10,900
3  Indonesia BAC 9,100
4  Thailand BAC 8,400
5  South Korea BAC 7,600

Summer Olympic Games

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 China (CHN)1881541
2 Indonesia (INA)76619
3 South Korea (KOR)67619
4 Denmark (DEN)1348
5 Japan (JPN)1124
Totals (5 nations)33253391

Participation in World Badminton Championships

The BWF World Championships (formerly known as IBF World Championships, also known as the World Badminton Championships) is a badminton tournament sanctioned by Badminton World Federation (BWF). The tournament started in 1977 and was held once every three years until 1983. Below is the gold medalists shown based by category and countries after the 2013 Championships. China has been the most successful in the World Championships ever since its inception in 1977. From 1977 up to 2001, the medals were usually divided among five countries, namely Indonesia, China, Korea, Denmark, Malaysia. However, in 2003, the winners included seven countries and in 2005 the medal board contained a record high of ten countries. Indonesians Tony Gunawan also bears the distinction of winning a gold medal in Men's Doubles, representing two different countries, 2001 partnering with Halim Haryanto for Indonesia and in 2005 partnering with Howard Bach to give the United States its first medal in the competition.

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 China (CHN)644063167
2 Indonesia22183373
3 South Korea (KOR)10132750
4 Denmark (DEN)10123658
5 England (ENG)391224
Totals (5 nations)10992171372

Participation in Thomas Cup, Uber Cup and Sudirman Cup

Indonesia leads in total titles with thirteen. It won four consecutive titles from 1970 through 1979 and five consecutive titles from 1994 through 2002. Indonesia's ten-year reign as champions was ended by the resurgence of China in 2004 when the Chinese won the title in Jakarta. Indonesia has played in the decisive final tie (men's team match) on nineteen occasions. Since the Thomas Cup format was overhauled in 1984, it has failed to place among the top four teams only once, in 2012.

Squads

Thomas Cup

Year Players
1984 Singles: Hastomo Arbi, Hadiyanto, Eddy Kurniawan, Liem Swie King, Icuk Sugiarto
Doubles: Christian Hadinata, Rudy Heryanto, Hariamanto Kartono, Hadibowo Susanto
1986 Singles: Eddy Kurniawan, Liem Swie King, Lius Pongoh, Icuk Sugiarto
Doubles: Bobby Ertanto, Christian Hadinata, Hariamanto Kartono, Hadibowo Susanto
1988[3] Singles: Alan Budikusuma, Eddy Kurniawan, Icuk Sugiarto, Ardy Wiranata
Doubles: Bobby Ertanto, Rudy Gunawan, Eddy Hartono, Liem Swie King, Hadibowo Susanto
1990[4] Singles: Alan Budikusuma, Joko Suprianto, Ardy Wiranata
Doubles: Rudy Gunawan, Eddy Hartono, Eddy Kurniawan, Richard Mainaky, Icuk Sugiarto
1992[5][6] Singles: Alan Budikusuma, Joko Suprianto, Hermawan Susanto, Ardy Wiranata
Doubles: Eddy Hartono, Rudy Gunawan, Rexy Mainaky, Bagus Setiadi, Ricky Subagja
1994[7] Singles: Hariyanto Arbi, Joko Suprianto, Hermawan Susanto, Ardy Wiranata
Doubles: Rudy Gunawan, Eddy Hartono, Rexy Mainaky, Ricky Subagja, Bambang Suprianto
1996[8][9] Singles: Hariyanto Arbi, Alan Budikusuma, Joko Suprianto, Ardy Wiranata
Doubles: Antonius Ariantho, Rudy Gunawan, Denny Kantono, Rexy Mainaky, Ricky Subagja, Bambang Suprianto
1998[10][11] Singles: Hariyanto Arbi, Hendrawan, Marleve Mainaky, Joko Suprianto, Indra Wijaya
Doubles: Sigit Budiarto, Tony Gunawan, Rexy Mainaky, Ricky Subagja, Candra Wijaya
2000[12] Singles: Hariyanto Arbi, Hendrawan, Taufik Hidayat, Marleve Mainaky
Doubles: Antonius Ariantho, Sigit Budiarto, Tony Gunawan, Rexy Mainaky, Ricky Subagja, Candra Wijaya
2002 Singles: Rony Agustinus, Hendrawan, Taufik Hidayat, Marleve Mainaky, Budi Santoso
Doubles: Sigit Budiarto, Halim Haryanto, Tri Kusharyanto, Bambang Suprianto, Candra Wijaya
2004 Singles: Taufik Hidayat, Sony Dwi Kuncoro, Wimpie Mahardi, Simon Santoso
Doubles: Luluk Hadiyanto, Eng Hian, Tri Kusharyanto, Flandy Limpele, Candra Wijaya, Alvent Yulianto
2006 Singles: Taufik Hidayat, Sony Dwi Kuncoro, Simon Santoso, Markus Wijanu
Doubles: Sigit Budiarto, Luluk Hadiyanto, Markis Kido, Hendra Setiawan, Candra Wijaya, Alvent Yulianto
2008 Singles: Taufik Hidayat, Sony Dwi Kuncoro, Simon Santoso, Tommy Sugiarto
Doubles: Hendra Aprida Gunawan, Markis Kido, Joko Riyadi, Hendra Setiawan, Nova Widianto, Candra Wijaya
2010 Singles: Taufik Hidayat, Sony Dwi Kuncoro, Dionysius Hayom Rumbaka, Simon Santoso
Doubles: Mohammad Ahsan, Hendra Aprida Gunawan, Markis Kido, Hendra Setiawan, Nova Widianto, Alvent Yulianto
2012 Singles: Taufik Hidayat, Dionysius Hayom Rumbaka, Simon Santoso, Tommy Sugiarto
Doubles: Mohammad Ahsan, Markis Kido, Ryan Agung Saputra, Bona Septano, Hendra Setiawan, Alvent Yulianto
2014 Singles: Ihsan Maulana Mustofa, Dionysius Hayom Rumbaka, Simon Santoso, Tommy Sugiarto
Doubles: Mohammad Ahsan, Berry Angriawan, Angga Pratama, Ryan Agung Saputra, Hendra Setiawan, Ricky Karanda Suwardi
2016[13][14] Singles: Jonatan Christie, Anthony Sinisuka Ginting, Ihsan Maulana Mustofa, Tommy Sugiarto
Doubles: Mohammad Ahsan, Marcus Fernaldi Gideon, Angga Pratama, Hendra Setiawan, Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo, Ricky Karanda Suwardi
2018 Singles: Jonatan Christie, Anthony Sinisuka Ginting, Firman Abdul Kholik, Ihsan Maulana Mustofa
Doubles: Mohammad Ahsan, Fajar Alfian, Muhammad Rian Ardianto, Marcus Fernaldi Gideon, Hendra Setiawan, Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo

Uber Cup

Year Players
1969 Utami Dewi, Retno Koestijah, , Hesty Lianawati, Minarni, Nurhaena, Poppy Tumengkol
1972 Utami Dewi, Regina Masli, Retno Koestijah, Intan Nurtjahja, Taty Sumirah, Poppy Tumengkol
1975 Utami Dewi, Regina Masli, Minarni, Taty Sumirah, Theresia Widiastuti, Imelda Wiguna
1978 Ivanna Lie, Regina Masli, Tjan So Gwan, Theresia Widiastuti, Imelda Wiguna, Verawaty Wiharjo
1981 Ruth Damayanti, Ivanna Lie, Taty Sumirah, Theresia Widiastuti, Imelda Wiguna, Verawaty Wiharjo
1984 Singles: Mary Herlim, Ratih Kumaladewi, Elizabeth Latief, Ivanna Lie
Doubles: Ruth Damayanti, Maria Francisca, Rosiana Tendean, Imelda Wiguna
1986 Singles: Sarwendah Kusumawardhani, Elizabeth Latief, Ivanna Lie
Doubles: Verawaty Fajrin, Yanti Kusmiati, Rosiana Tendean, Imelda Wiguna
1988 Singles: Kho Mei Hwa, Sarwendah Kusumawardhani, Elizabeth Latief, Susi Susanti
Doubles: Dwi Elmyati, Verawaty Fadjrin, Yanti Kusmiati, Erma Sulistianingsih
1990[4] Singles: Sarwendah Kusumawardhani, Susi Susanti, Minarti Timur,
Doubles: Yanti Kusmiati, Erma Sulistianingsih, Rosiana Tendean, Verawaty Wiharjo
1992[6][15] Singles: Yuni Kartika, Sarwendah Kusumawardhani, Yuliani Sentosa, Susi Susanti
Doubles: Catherine, Finarsih, Erma Sulistaningsih, Lili Tampi, Rosiana Tendean
1994[7] Singles: Mia Audina, Yuni Kartika, Yuliani Sentosa, Susi Susanti
Doubles: Finarsih, Eliza Nathanael, Zelin Resiana, Lili Tampi, Rosiana Tendean
1996[9] Singles: Mia Audina, Lidya Djaelawijaya, Meiluawati, Yuliani Sentosa, Susi Susanti
Doubles: Finarsih, Deyana Lomban, Eliza Nathanael, Zelin Resiana, Lili Tampi
1998[10] Singles: Ellen Angelina, Mia Audina, Cindana Hartono, Meiluawati, Susi Susanti
Doubles: Finarsih, Indarti Issolina, Deyana Lomban, Eliza Nathanael, Zelin Resiana
2000 Singles: Ellen Angelina, Lidya Djaelawijaya, Yuli Marfuah, Ninik Masrikah
Doubles: Deyana Lomban, Eliza Nathanael, Zelin Resiana, Etty Tantri, Minarti Timur, Cynthia Tuwankotta
2002 Singles: Ellen Angelina, Lidya Djaelawijaya, Yuli Marfuah, Atu Rosalina
Doubles: Eny Erlangga, Emma Ermawati, Deyana Lomban, Vita Marissa, Jo Novita, Minarti Timur
2004 Singles: Silvi Antarini, Adriyanti Firdasari, Fransisca Ratnasari, Maria Kristin Yulianti
Doubles: Eny Erlangga, Rani Mundiasti, Lilyana Natsir, Jo Novita, Lita Nurlita, Greysia Polii
2006 Did not qualified
2008 Singles: Adriyanti Firdasari, Fransisca Ratnasari, Maria Kristin Yulianti, Pia Zebadiah Bernadeth
Doubles: Vita Marissa, Rani Mundiasti, Lilyana Natsir, Jo Novita, Endang Nursugianti, Greysia Polii
2010 Singles: Adriyanti Firdasari, Lindaweni Fanetri, Maria Febe Kusumastuti, Maria Kristin Yulianti
Doubles: Anneke Feinya Agustin, Shendy Puspa Irawati, Meiliana Jauhari, Nitya Krishinda Maheswari, Lilyana Natsir, Greysia Polii
2012 Singles: Adriyanti Firdasari, Lindaweni Fanetri, Maria Febe Kusumastuti, Bellaetrix Manuputty
Doubles: Anneke Feinya Agustin, Suci Rizki Andini, Della Destiara Haris, Meiliana Jauhari, Nitya Krishinda Maheswari, Greysia Polii
2014 Singles: Adriyanti Firdasari, Lindaweni Fanetri, Maria Febe Kusumastuti, Bellaetrix Manuputty
Doubles: Suci Rizki Andini, Nitya Krishinda Maheswari, Tiara Rosalia Nuraidah, Greysia Polii, Rizki Amelia Pradipta, Pia Zebadiah Bernadeth
2016[13][14] Singles: Hanna Ramadini, Fitriani, Maria Febe Kusumastuti, Gregoria Mariska Tunjung
Doubles: Anggia Shitta Awanda, Della Destiara Haris, Ni Ketut Mahadewi Istirani, Tiara Rosalia Nuraidah, Greysia Polii, Rosyita Eka Putri Sari
2018 Singles: Dinar Dyah Ayustine, Fitriani, Ruselli Hartawan, Gregoria Mariska Tunjung
Doubles: Della Destiara Haris, Ni Ketut Mahadewi Istarani, Nitya Krishinda Maheswari, Greysia Polii, Rizki Amelia Pradipta, Apriyani Rahayu

Sudirman Cup

2019

2017

2015

2013

2011

2009

2007

2005[16]

2003[17]

2001[18]

1999[19]

1997[20]

1995

1993[21][22][23]

1991[24]

1989[25][26]

Asian Games

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 China (CHN)432935107
2 Indonesia (INA)28274499
3 South Korea (KOR)16173366
4 Japan (JPN)782540
5 Malaysia (MAS)782035
Totals (5 nations)10189157347

Participation in Asia Championships

Participation in Badminton Asia Championships

Rank Country 62 65 69 71 76 83 85 87 88 89 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 Total
1 China31431312243143313313243354325270
2 Indonesia22531211114131123221111139
3 South Korea12213122111233124111225133
4 Malaysia421111221121118
5 Hong Kong111115

Southeast Asian Games

Team competition

BWF Open Tournaments

Tournament MS WS MD WD XD Total
All England Open154202546
Australian Open6331,5114,5
Brunei Open2253114
Canada Open8022214
China Open6081419
Chinese Taipei Open156125846
Denmark Open6382322
Dutch Open96103230
French Open706,526,522
German Open6234116
Hong Kong Open50110420
India Open4242618
Indonesia Open221121131582
Japan Open85120429
Korea Open4151213
Macau Open101046
Malaysia Open89123941
New Zealand Open1131511
Philippines Open001113
Russian Open210003
Singapore Open1661861258
Swedish Open4170012
Swiss Open322018
Thailand Open104124535
U.S. Open102433,522,5
Vietnam Open32776,525,5

Men's doubles supremacy

Natsir and Ahmad at 2012 Summer Olympics

Even though they actually have a balance of strength in all events, they are known for producing many great doubles in the men's category. Their doubles had conquered the Olympic Gold Medal, World Champion titles, All Englands and many open titles over decades. Among their greats are Tjun Tjun, Christian Hadinata, Eddie Hartono, Rexy Mainaky, Ricky Subagja, Chandra Wijaya, Tony G, Sigit Budiarto, Markis Kido and Hendra Setiawan. Despite their domination, the national badminton governing body is also known for their awkward splitting decision. It happened twice in the Thomas Cup and thrice in the Olympics. Indonesia leads in total titles with thirteen. It won four consecutive titles from 1970 through 1979 and five consecutive titles from 1994 through 2002. Indonesia's ten-year reign as champions was ended by the resurgence of China in 2004 when the Chinese won the title in Jakarta. Indonesia has played in the decisive final tie (team match) on eighteen occasions. Since the Thomas Cup format was overhauled in 1984, it has failed to place among the top four teams only once, in 2012. In 1986, they chose to field King/Ertanto instead of the more solid King/Kartono, considering that Kartono always played badly against the Chinese. In 2004, they fielded weak doubles against strong Danish pairs. Because of those decisions, they lost the match. As for the Olympics, they didn't do anything to maintain the Halim/Tony partnership and Tony G quit the national team. They also split the Candra/Sigit combination months before the 2004 Games. Four years later in Beijing they deselected Tony G/Candra in favor of Luluk/Alvent. For the London Games, the same thing repeated once more due to their decision in deceiving reigning Olympics Gold Medalists Markis/Hendra. The 2005 edition also brought new faces in the mixed doubles event which had been dominated by China and Korea since 1997. With the retirement of defending champions and two-time winners Kim Dong-moon/Ra Kyung-min (Korea), Nova Widianto/Lilyana Natsir won Indonesia's first mixed doubles gold since 1980 when Christian Hadinata/Imelda Wiguna won it last for Indonesia.

Match fixing

At the London 2012 Olympic Games, two members of the Indonesian badminton team, Greysia Poli and Meiliana Jauhari, were thrown out of the tournament after being found guilty of match fixing. Chair of the London Organising Committee, Lord Coe described the incident as "depressing".[29]

gollark: I don't know if that *is* actually shorter given indentatioforms, but it might be.
gollark: Yes. `h,*t=ll=h,*map(lambda n:n+1,t)`
gollark: I think so. Hold on.
gollark: So if I manually extract the relevant region with `head` and `tail` it works perfectly*. Yet it does *not* in the actual code.
gollark: My thing is just unknown frame descriptoring. This is apioform.

References

  1. "BWF World Team Rankings". Bwfbadminton.org. Badminton World Federation.
  2. "BWF World Team Rankings". Bwfbadminton.org. Badminton World Federation.
  3. "Ardy included in Indonesian Cup team". eresources.nlb.gov.sg. The Straits Times. 9 May 1988. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  4. "Jangan Tenggelam Karena Kalah" (in Indonesian). Tempo. 9 June 1990. Archived from the original on 20 May 2010. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  5. "Joko Suprianto Terpilih Sebagai Tunggal Keempat Piala Thomas". Kompas (in Indonesian). 22 April 1992. p. 15.
  6. "Rombongan Piala Thomas dan Uber Bertolak Sabtu Pagi Ini". Kompas (in Indonesian). 2 May 1992. p. 15. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  7. "Piala Thomas dan Uber. Hermawan, Eddy dan Mia Masuk Tim". Kompas (in Indonesian). 24 April 1994. p. 1. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  8. "Tim Indonesia di Piala Thomas". Kompas (in Indonesian). 14 May 1996. p. 16. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  9. "Nominasi Tim Final Piala Thomas dan Uber". Kompas (in Indonesian). 8 May 1996. p. 16. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  10. "Wajah Baru Dominasi Tim Piala Thomas". Kompas (in Indonesian). 2 May 1998. p. 1. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  11. "Soerjadi: Harus Rela Meniadakan Diri". Kompas (in Indonesian). 4 May 1998. p. 8. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  12. "Thomas, Uber Cup teams announced". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 24 April 2019. Retrieved 11 October 2019.
  13. Pasukan Indonesia: Thomas & Uber team
  14. Indonesian Thomas Cup and Uber Cup players Archived 2011-05-18 at the Wayback Machine
  15. "Tim Piala Uber Indonesia Yang Akan Diturunkan Di Final Di Kuala Lumpur". Kompas (in Indonesian). 25 April 1992. p. 15.
  16. "Menunggu Kiprah Indonesia di Piala Sudirman 2005" (in Indonesian). detik.com. 10 May 2005. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  17. "5 days countdown - Sudirman Cup 2003 analysis, part 2". Badminton Central. 12 March 2003. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  18. "RI told to turn underdog status to advantage at Sudirman Cup". jawawa.id. Jakarta Post. 17 May 2001. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  19. "Pesan Ketua Umum PBSI: Kalahkan Malaysia". Kompas (in Indonesian). 6 May 1999. p. 17.
  20. "Pemain Indonesia Ke Piala Sudirman". Kompas (in Indonesian). 19 May 1997. p. 17.
  21. Sukumar, Dev (7 May 2009). "The Clash of Powerhouses – Sudirman Cup in the 90's". Badminton World Federation. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  22. "Haryanto Arbi Tidak Patah Semangat". Kompas (in Indonesian). 18 May 1993. p. 15.
  23. "Rexy Batal Ke Piala Sudirman". Kompas (in Indonesian). 22 May 1993. p. 15.
  24. "Tim Pendahulu Awali Regu Indonesia Ke Copenhagen". Kompas (in Indonesian). 23 April 1991. p. 15.
  25. Sukumar, Dev (3 May 2009). "Glory on Home Soil – Sudirman Cup '89". Badminton World Federation. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  26. "Denmark faces Indonesia in semis". The New Paper. 27 May 1989. p. 28. Retrieved 16 June 2020 via National Library Board.
  27. 2005 SEA Games men's team badminton results
  28. 2005 SEA Games women's team badminton results
  29. "Olympic badminton players charged with trying to lose their games". The Guardian. 2012-08-01. Retrieved 2012-08-01.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.