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Xu Huaiwen

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Birth name
  
徐懷雯

Country
  
Germany


Handedness
  
Right

Name
  
Xu Huaiwen

Xu Huaiwen BadmintonEuropecom News Landing Page


Born
  
August 2, 1975 (age 48) Guiyang, Guizhou (
1975-08-02
)

Badminton Unlimited | Xu Huaiwen Feature


Xu Huaiwen (simplified Chinese: 徐怀雯; traditional Chinese: 徐懷雯; pinyin: Xú Huáiwén; born August 2, 1975) is a badminton player from Germany. She was born in Guiyang, Guizhou, People's Republic of China. She decided to play for Germany because the Chinese thought that she was too short to play professional world badminton.

Contents

Xu Huaiwen Olympische Spiele Huaiwen Xu spielt fr Deutschland

Anna rice vs xu huaiwen set 2a


Career

Xu Huaiwen wwwbadzinenetwpcontentuploadsFeaturesXUHua

Xu was among the most successful of a number of Chinese-born female players who emigrated from their badminton-rich homeland, in part, for a better opportunity to play in the world's biggest events. Beginning in 2003 when she won a spate of middle tier open tournaments in Europe, Xu went on to become one of the more consistent performers on the international circuit. She was a women's singles bronze medalist twice at the BWF World Championships (2005 and 2006) and won European Championships in 2006 and 2008 over Mia Audina and Tine Rasmussen respectively in the finals. At the 2008 Beijing Olympics Xu was eliminated in a close quarterfinal match by China's Xie Xingfang, the world's number one ranked player.

Xu Huaiwen CPH07XuHUaiwenjpg

Among Xu's more than twenty national and international singles titles are the Scottish (2003), Polish (2003), Dutch (2005), and Swiss (2006) Opens, the Copenhagen Masters (2007), and five consecutive (2004–2008) German National Championships. Notably, she earned all of these titles after turning 27, an age at which world level singles players often feel that their best years are behind them.

Xu retired from playing on the international circuit in 2009 and worked as a coach for two years at the Bellevue Badminton Club near Seattle, teaching the Junior National team of young badminton players hoping to succeed in professional badminton. In 2010, she was appointed as an International Olympic Committee athlete role model for the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics. From 2011 to 2012, she served the Dutch Badminton Association as their National Coach.

Personal life

XU speaks fluent Chinese, German and English. She is married to Matthew Curtain, the Director of Sport of the Commonwealth Games Federation. The couple has a daughter.

References

Xu Huaiwen Wikipedia