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Sports / Badminton

Badminton: Lin Dan earns meeting with world champ Chen

Published: 07 Mar 2015 - 03:53 pm | Last Updated: 16 Jan 2022 - 07:30 pm

 

Birmingham, United Kingdom--Olympic champion Lin Dan earned his most significant world tour showdown in two-and-a-half years with a third successive straight games victory to ensure a meeting with world champion Chen Long in the semi-finals of the All-England Open.

The 31-year-old Chinese legend outmanoeuvred Kento Momota, a 20-year-old hero of Japan's Thomas Cup world team triumph, by 21-18, 21-19 in Birmingham on Friday.

He proved himself as both a tactical maestro, and as possessed of the greatest range of strokes in the game.

Lin was slightly behind during most of the first game against an opponent who tended to prosper when he was able to launched speedy attacks. After getting his nose in front at 18-17, however, Lin was increasingly able alter the character of the match.

"I found a way to win the points more easily," he said. "I tried to control the game and prevent Momota from making further attacks. I was really happy with the way I was able to adjust."

Lin did it by mixing pushes to the net with accurate flicks and lifts to the back corners, and after winning the first game gained an immediate benefit from the change on mood.

He took six points in a row and then went on to 9-2, moving fluently and playing his cat and mouse game masterfully. Lin did, he admitted, lose a little concentration at that stage, and Momota reduced the deficit to just one point near the end.

But Lin reached match point with a rare smash and closed it out when he forced Momota to lift the shuttle wide, ensuring the all-Chinese semi-final showdown. Very shortly afterwards the top-seeded Chinese player, Chen Long, won 21-11, 21-11 against Chou Tien Chen, the sixth-seeded Taiwanese.

Predictably Lin did not feel it wise to speculate on the nature of a match with a compatriot, commenting merely that "it's a team mate again - and I'll try my best." He had beaten Xue Song, another team mate, in three surprisingly difficult games in the first round.

Earlier another Chinese player, Sun Yu, the unseeded 21-year-old from Dalian, scored her second shock win in two days to become a surprise semi-final survivor in the women's singles.

The improving Sun beat Ratchanok Intanon, the 20-year-old former world champion from Thailand, coming from 11-14 down in the second game and from 7-12 down in the third. Sun then built a six-point lead after which Intanon collapsed and called a halt.

Her injury was mysteriously self-inflicted as she attempted a routine smash, during which she toppled and fell prostrate. Eventually she was declared to have cramp in a calf muscle, giving Sun victory by a score of 11-21, 21-19, 19-13 retired.

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