Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Lee Chong Wei

Lee Chong Wei
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a Chinese name; the family name is Lee (李).
Lee Chong Wei

Personal information
Date of birth
October 21, 1982 (1982-10-21) (age 25)
Place of birth
Parit Buntar, Perak, Malaysia
Height
1.74 m (5 ft 8+1⁄2 in)
Weight
60 kg (130 lb/9.4 st)
Men's singles
Country
Malaysia
Handedness
Right
Coach
Misbun Sidek


Highest Ranking
1 (August 24, 2006)
Current Ranking
2 (February 24, 2008)
BWF Profile
Lee Chong Wei (Simplified Chinese: 李宗伟) (born October 21, 1982) is a professional badminton player from Malaysia. He was born in Parit Buntar, Perak and later moved to Bukit Mertajam, Penang. He received his early education at Jit Sin Primary School (B) and continued his secondary education at Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Berapit. He was admitted to Bukit Jalil Sports School then to complete his Form 4 and Form 5 studies.
Wong Mew Choo, a Malaysian badminton player, is his girlfriend

Badminton career
Lee played in 2004 Summer Olympics in men's singles, defeating Ng Wei of Hong Kong in the first round. In the round of 16, Chong was himself defeated by Chen Hong of China[1]. In 2005 he bagged his first 5-star event in the Danish Open. He also successfully defended his Malaysia Open and bagged a bronze in the BWF World Championships[2].
Lee Chong Wei held an unbeaten record in all tournaments held inside Malaysian territory for 3 years, from 2004 to 2006 and another win in 2008 totaling 4 all together in his home soil. He has won the Malaysia Open for three consecutive years, including 2006 in which, in what is considered one of the greatest comebacks in badminton history, he fought back from 13–20 down and saved eight gold medal points against the 2006 World champion Lin Dan, to finally wrap up the match 23–21. In 2005, he beat Olympic champion Taufik Hidayat and World No. 1 Lin Dan en route to the title.
He won the gold medal in the team event and the individual event in the 2006 Commonwealth Games. In the individual events Chong Wei fought off his fellow country man Wong Choong Hann for the gold medal beating him in two straight sets. After winning the gold medals he returned to Malaysia to win the Asian Badminton Championships title and soon after that he won the 2005 Malaysian Sportsman Of The Year Award.
In the 2006 World Badminton Championships, he disappointingly lost to Bao Chunlai of China in the quarterfinal in three tightly contested games despite dominating the first game. He was leading in the first set but his performance was eventually undone by committing too many unforced errors. He won the second game easily and both players went toe to toe in the third game before Lee Chong Wei succumbed to pressure after the score was tied at 18-18. Prior to losing this match to Bao, their head to head meetings record stood at 8-0 in favour of Lee Chong Wei. He entered the World Championship as the world ranked number one and as the top seeded player.[3] This loss is seen as a stepback for Lee as he was favoured by many to go all the way to capture the world title.
This dismal performance was followed by another below-par outing in the 2006 Japan Open where he lost tamely to Indonesian maestro Taufik Hidayat in straight sets. These recent defeats ended his brief reign as world number one. However, it seems that his old form has returned after his victory against Bao Chunlai in the finals of the Djarum Indonesian Open 2007, the irony being that his defeat against Bao Chunlai in the World Championships in Madrid was what started his downhill slide.
Lee continued his great form later in 2007 Sudirman Cup, defeating all opponents in straight sets, including world champion, Lin Dan whom he clearly outclassed throughout the game. Lee was also clearly controlling the final match against Chen Hong in 2007 Philippines Open.
Homeground pressure got to him in the 2007 World Badminton Championships in Kuala Lumpur, and Lee exited the tournament after losing to Sony Dwi Kuncoro in the last 16[4]. Lee was quick to make amends, and barely a month later continued his good run of form by upsetting Lin Dan on-route to win the 2007 Japan Open.
Later, he defeated Chunlai once again to lift the French Open title, having lost to the same opponent the previous week in the Denmark Open semifinal. Another confrontation with Bao Chunlai in the China Open final in Guangzhou led to another loss.
He recently defeated Lee Hyun-il at the 2008 Malaysia Open to clinch his fourth victory there in the last five years.
In the 2008 Thomas Cup, he was unstoppable, winning all of his matches in straight sets,including thrashing Lin Dan 21-12,21-14..Chong wei was aggressive and applied the right strategies in beating Lin Dan, but at the end Malaysia eventually lost the team event 2-3.
After the 2008 Thomas Cup, Lee decided to participate in the 2008 AVIVA Singapore Open. There, he clinched another title by beating his teammate Wong Choong Hann 17-21, 21-5, 21-9 in the second round, Joachim Persson 21-9, 21-7 in the quater-finals, the experienced Peter Gade 21-18, 21-13 in the semi-finals, and Indonesia's Simon Santoso 21-13, 21-5 in the Final.
He is currently coached by Misbun Sidek.

Style and attributes
Lee Chong Wei's most well known attribute is his signature forehand cross court smashes and incredible defensive ability. His cross court shots are accomplished by using a heavy angle on his racquet head, and he plays incredible inside slices. He frequently retrieves attacking shots by diving towards the shot with an outstretched racket, then quickly recovering to his feet in time to continue the rally. Not only does he dive to keep a rally going, he also sometimes plays winners when he dives. Even Lin Dan has suffered Lee's defense on countless occasions.
Lee is also known for his smooth and efficient footwork that makes him one of the fastest singles player in the circuit. His strength in the third set (attributed to incredible fitness) and his all around deceptive and accurate strokes are also well known. In terms of his weaknesses he will sometimes make too many unforced errors at inopportune times, get trapped at the back corners of the court, and sometimes has difficulty finishing off rallies once he has gained an advantage.

4 comments:

akbarz said...

Chong Wei will against Sony Dwi Kuncoro today. I hope he will show amazing performance to win the game.

akbarz said...

Chaiyoo.... Chong Wei!!!

akbarz said...

Don't give up!!

akbarz said...

NATIONAL badminton singles coach Misbun Sidek will be rewarded with RM60,000 for his role in guiding 2008 Olympics silver medallist Lee Chong Wei to sporting glory. Youth and Sports Minister Datuk Ismail Sabri Yaakob said Misbun played an important role in Lee securing the silver. "The ministry considers Misbun worthy of the reward," he said in the Parliament lobby yesterday. The reward is in addition to the RM50,000 recently presented to Misbun's wife Latifah Sidek, who had to undergo a kidney transplant in China. Malacca Chief Minister Datuk Seri Mohd Ali Rustam has said the state would award Misbun a datukship on Thursday.