Wang Tzu-wei

Wang Tzu-wei (Chinese: 王子維; born 27 February 1995) is a Taiwanese badminton player.[1] He won his first international title at the 2014 New Zealand Open tournament.[2] Wang competed at the 2017 Summer Universiade, won the gold medals in the men's singles and team events.

Wang Tzu-wei
Personal information
CountryRepublic of China (Taiwan)
Born (1995-02-27) 27 February 1995
Taipei, Taiwan
Height1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
HandednessRight
Men's singles
Career record231 wins, 150 losses
Highest ranking10 (5 October 2017)
Current ranking12 (17 March 2020)
BWF profile

Achievements

Summer Universiade

Men's singles

Year Venue Opponent Score Result
2017 Taipei Gymnasium, Taipei, Taiwan Kenta Nishimoto 21–16, 21–15 Gold

BWF World Junior Championships

Boys' singles

Year Venue Opponent Score Result
2013 Hua Mark Indoor Stadium, Bangkok, Thailand Heo Kwang-hee 11–21, 12–21 Silver

Asian Junior Championships

Boys' singles

Year Venue Opponent Score Result
2013 Likas Indoor Stadium, Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia Jeon Hyuk-jin 20–22, 18–21 Bronze

BWF World Tour (1 title)

The BWF World Tour, announced on 19 March 2017 and implemented in 2018,[3] is a series of elite badminton tournaments, sanctioned by Badminton World Federation (BWF). The BWF World Tour are divided into six levels, namely World Tour Finals, Super 1000, Super 750, Super 500, Super 300 (part of the HSBC World Tour), and the BWF Tour Super 100.[4]

Men's singles

Year Tournament Level Opponent Score Result
2019 Syed Modi International Super 300 Sourabh Verma 21–15, 21–17 Winner

BWF Grand Prix (2 titles, 5 runners-up)

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

Men's singles

Year Tournament Opponent Score Result
2017 New Zealand Open Lee Cheuk Yiu 21–15, 15–21, 20–22 Runner-up
2017 Chinese Taipei Open Chou Tien-chen 21–18, 19–21, 15–21 Runner-up
2017 German Open Chou Tien-chen 16–21, 14–21 Runner-up
2016 Dutch Open Ajay Jayaram 21–10, 17–21, 21–18 Winner
2015 Chinese Taipei Masters Sony Dwi Kuncoro 13–21, 15–21 Runner-up
2014 Scottish Open Ville Lang 21–17, 20–22, 16–21 Runner-up
2014 New Zealand Open Hsu Jen-hao 21–9, 21–13 Winner
     BWF Grand Prix Gold tournament
     BWF Grand Prix tournament

BWF International Challenge/Series (3 runners-up)

Men's singles

Year Tournament Opponent Score Result
2016 Vietnam International Nguyễn Tiến Minh 20–22, 16–21 Runner-up
2014 Irish Open Ng Ka Long 18–21, 13–21 Runner-up
2013 Polish International Lin Yu-hsien 19–21, 16–21 Runner-up
     BWF International Challenge tournament
     BWF International Series tournament
     BWF Future Series tournament

World University Championships

Men's singles

Year Venue Opponent Score Result
2016 Ramenskoe, Russia Zulfadli Zulkiffli 21-6, 21-13 Winner

Invitation Tournament

Mixed doubles

Year Tournament Partner Opponent Score Result
2017 Jeunesse Cup International All Star Tai Tzu-ying Mads Conrad-Petersen
Line Kjaersfeldt
18–21, 20–22 Runner-up
gollark: Especially if you can wrangle a good FPGA into running hashes really fast.
gollark: This sounds like a lot, but computers *are* fairly fast.
gollark: There are maybe 1e5 common first and last names, so you can bruteforce all likely names ever in 1e10 hash operations (maybe add another factor of 10 for spelling/caps?).
gollark: Palaiaologosososd, design a new protocol using argon2 or something.
gollark: So I guess the issue is with sending fast hashes of your name at all!

References


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