Karina Sørensen

Karina Inge Sørensen (born 22 February 1980) is a retired Danish badminton player from Hvidovre BC.[2] She graduated with a masters degree in international marketing from the University of Southern Denmark in 2008.[1] She is also involved in judo as development consultant in Danish Judo & Ju-Jitsu Federation.[3]

Karina Sørensen
Personal information
Birth nameKarina Inge Sørensen[1]
Country Denmark
Born (1980-02-22) 22 February 1980
ResidenceHvidovre, Denmark
HandednessRight
EventDoubles
BWF profile

Achievements

European Junior Championships

Girls' doubles

Year Venue Partner Opponent Score Result
1999 Kelvin Hall, Glasgow, Scotland Helle Nielsen Petra Overzier
Anne Hönscheid
2–15, 15–8, 9–15 Silver

Mixed doubles

Year Venue Partner Opponent Score Result
1999 Kelvin Hall, Glasgow, Scotland Mathias Boe Sebastian Schmidt
Anne Hönscheid
15–5, 15–4 Gold

BWF International Challenge/Series

Women's doubles

Year Tournament Partner Opponent Score Result
2009 Slovak Open Maria Lykke Andersen Marija Ulitina
Natalya Voytsekh
21–17, 21–10 Winner
2003 Italian International Louise Ibsen Agnese Allegrini
Federica Panini
12–15, 15–6, 5–15 Runner-up
2003 Iceland International Line Isberg Neli Boteva
Petya Nedelcheva
15–7, 9–15, 10–15 Runner-up
2003 Cyprus International Mette Melcher Maria Ioannou
Katarzyna Krasowska
15–13, 15–2 Winner
2002 Slovenian International Lena Frier Kristiansen Ekaterina Ananina
Anastasia Russkikh
7–11, 5–11 Runner-up
2002 Dutch International Tine Høy Carina Mette
Juliane Schenk
4–7, 8–7, 7–2, ?–?, ?–? Runner-up
2001 Norwegian International Julie Houmann Tine Høy
Mie Nielsen
2–7, 7–4, 6–8, ?–?, ?–? Winner
2001 Slovak International Julie Houmann Kamila Augustyn
Nadieżda Kostiuczyk
4–7, 4–7, 1–7 Runner-up
2001 Belgian International Harriet Johnson Denise Naulin
Jana Voigtmann
15–8, 15–11 Winner

Mixed doubles

Year Tournament Partner Opponent Score Result
2009 Slovak Open Mark Philip Winther Aliaksei Konakh
Alesia Zaitsava
18–21, 21–9, 21–13 Winner
2003 Italian International Jesper Hovgaard Donal O'Halloran
Bing Huang
15–11, 3–15, 15–11 Winner
2003 Cyprus International Simon Mollyhus Peter Hasbak
Mette Melcher
15–10, 17–14 Winner
2002 Iceland International Peter Steffensen Dennis S. Jensen
Stine Borgström
Runner-up
2002 Slovenian International William Milroy Alexandr Russkikh
Anastasia Russkikh
5–11, 8–11 Runner-up
2001 Iceland International Thomas Laybourn Aqueel Bhatti
Emma Hendry
7–2, 7–4, 7–1 Winner
2001 Norwegian International Tommy Sørensen Jörgen Olsson
Frida Andreasson
2–7, 8–7, 7–5, ?–?, ?–? Winner
2001 Belgian International Wouter Claes Bruce Topping
Jayne Plunkett
15–7, 15–9 Winner
2000 Dutch International Mathias Boe Tijs Creemers
Betty Krab
15–8, 15–9 Winner
2000 Portugal International Mathias Boe Valeriy Strelcov
Natalia Golovkina
15–4, 15–12 Winner
     BWF International Challenge tournament
     BWF/IBF International Series tournament
     BWF Future Series tournament
gollark: Exactly how many old bases do you have?
gollark: Networking incursed.
gollark: Information screens good, heav.
gollark: Computers are fast, FFTs are O(n log n) or something, just do so.
gollark: I guess there might be precision issues in reality™ but still.

References

  1. "Karina Inge Sørensen". www.atwork.dk (in Danish). Archived from the original on 30 July 2020.
  2. "Profile:Karina SØRENSEN". bwfbadminton.com. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  3. "Denmark focuses on women's day". www.eju.net. European Judo Union. 7 March 2018. Archived from the original on 30 July 2020.

Karina Sørensen at BWF.tournamentsoftware.com


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