World Deaf Badminton Championships
The World Deaf Badminton Championships are organized by Comité International des Sports des Sourds since 2003. They are held every four years.
Championships
| Year | Edition | Host City | NOC |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | 1 | Sofia | Bulgaria |
| 2007 | 2 | Mülheim | Germany |
| 2011 | 3 | Bucheon | South Korea |
| 2015 | 4 | Sofia | Bulgaria |
| 2019 | 5 | Taipei | Taiwan |
World Youth Deaf Badminton Championships
| Year | Edition | Host City | NOC |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | 1 | Sofia | Bulgaria |
| 2019 | 2 | Taipei | Taiwan |
Medalists
| Year | Event | 1. | 2. | 3. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | Women's doubles | Jeong Seon-hwa Bak Eun-jeong | Kristina Dovydaityte Jevgenija Novik | Isabelle Cicala Sophie Bula |
| Women's singles | Jeong Seon-hwa | Kristina Dovydaityte | Olga Andreevna Gurina | |
| Men's doubles | Sin Hyun-woo Woo Ji-soo | Artemy Mikhailovich Karpov Anton Vladimirovich Kulakov | Jannich Tanghus Andersen Jesper Söndergaard | |
| Men's singles | Rajeev Bagga | Jannich Tanghus Andersen | Woo Ji-soo | |
| Mixed doubles | Tomas Dovydaityte Kristina Dovydaityte | Artemy Mikhailovich Karpov Galina Vasilieva | Sin Hyun-woo Jeong Seon-hwa | |
| 2007 | Women's doubles | Mika Hiwatari Mio Inoue | Gergana Stoyanova Baramova Silviya Arsova Chapkanova | Yu Eun-kyung Jeong Seon-hwa |
| Women's singles | Kristina Dovydaityte | Olga Andreevna Gurina | Jeong Seon-hwa | |
| Men's doubles | Teh Cheang Hock Yeo Kok Fang | Rajeev Bagga Carl Sadler | Huang Chung-Han Lin Chien-Chen | |
| Men's singles | Rajeev Bagga | Jannich Tanghus Andersen | Rohit Bhaker | |
| Mixed doubles | Artemy Mikhailovich Karpov Alena Igorevna Pavlova | Tomas Dovydaityte Kristina Dovydaityte | Oliver Witte Saskia Fischer | |
| Team | Russia (Mikhail Alexandrovich Efremov, Feliks Galkin, Olga Andreevna Gurina, Artemy Mikhailovich Karpov, Alena Igorevna Pavlova, Alexander Sergeevich Vasiliev) | Japan (Mari Ishii, Takeshi Katsuta, Daisuke Miyazaki, Mika Hiwatari, Mio Inoue, Jun Nakanishi, Aiko Nozu) | Lithuania (Tomas Dovydaityte, Kristina Dovydaityte, Emilija Mateikaite, Viktorija Novik, Kazimieras Dauskurtas) |
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.