Wong Wing Ki


Vincent Wong Wing Ki is a Hong Kong badminton player.

Name change

Wong Wing Ki was born Wong Shu Ki, but he changed his name when he was 17. "Shu" is homophonous to another word meaning "to lose" in Chinese, and he was told to change it.

Education

Wong Wing Ki was a student at La Salle College. He quit school after Form 3 to concentrate on a badminton career.

Career

2011 Denmark Open

On 19 October, Wong beat Lee Hyun-il in the first round by 10-21, 21-16 and 21-14, then on 20 October, Wong Wing Ki pulled off the biggest upset of the 2011 Denmark Open when he dumped four-time world champion Lin Dan of China 21-10, 17-21, 21-19 out of the competition and won through into the quarter-finals. Wong was ranked 27th in the world collected at least 5,000 points from the tournament. Hong Kong head coach Tim He Yiming said, "The result will have a great impact on Wong, as he is challenging for a place in next year's Olympic Games." In the third round, Wong Wing Ki lost to Sho Sasaki by 21-15, 15-21 and 7-21.

2012 German Open

In the 2012 German Open, Wong Wing Ki defeated Sony Dwi Kuncoro to proceed to the last 16. He was then in superb form to claim a 21-9, 21-17, victory against 2010 World Champion Chen Jin, which set up with a quarter-final match with Jan O Jorgensen. Jorgensen ended the giant-killing run of Wong Wing Ki when he defeated the Hong Kong shuttler 21-17, 21-11.

2012 London Olympics

Wong Wing Ki will be one of eighteen players seeded in the 2012 London Olympics Men's singles tournament. He is currently only ranked 19th but 5 of the top 18 ranked players failed to make it to the Olympics. Wong Wing Ki won through into the knockout stages of the men's singles event after he overcame France's Brice Leverdez 21-11, 21-16 for his second win in a row in the group stage. Wong Wing-ki then crashed out of the last 16. His dreams were ended by third seed Chen Long, 21-17 21-17. The second set was tied seven times, but several of the shuttle's bounces on the net didn't go Wong's way. Wong said he felt his attack from the backcourt was lethal, but he said Chen was a stronger player on the net.

Achievements

Asian Junior Championships

Boys' singles
YearVenueOpponentScoreResult
2008Stadium Juara, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Wang Zhengming14–21, 15–21 Bronze

BWF Grand Prix (1 title, 4 runners-up)

The BWF Grand Prix has two level such as Grand Prix and Grand Prix Gold. It is a series of badminton tournaments, sanctioned by Badminton World Federation since 2007.
Men's singles
YearTournamentOpponentScoreResult
2016Vietnam Open Chong Wei Feng21–12, 14–21, 21–13 Winner
2015Bitburger Open Ng Ka Long12–21, 13–21 Runner-up
2014Macau Open Xue Song21–16, 13–21, 19–21 Runner-up
2013U.S. Open Tien Minh Nguyen21–18, 17–21, 18–21 Runner-up
2009New Zealand Open Chan Yan Kit9–21, 9–21 Runner-up

BWF International Challenge/Series (0 titles, 1 runner-up)

Men's singles
YearTournamentOpponentScoreResult
2011New Zealand International Riichi Takeshita19–21, 19–21 Runner-up

Record against selected opponents

Includes results against Olympic quarterfinals, Worlds semifinalists, and Super Series finalists, as well as all Olympic opponents.