2014 Scottish Open Grand Prix

Badminton tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2014 Scottish Open was the seventeenth grand prix badminton tournament of the 2014 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in Emirates Arena, Glasgow, Scotland from 19 until 23 November 2014 and had a total purse of $50,000.[1] This tournament supported by the Glasgow City Council, Event Scotland, and Yonex.[2]

Dates19 November 2014 (2014-11-19)
23 November 2014 (2014-11-23)
Total prize moneyUS$50,000
LocationGlasgow, Scotland
Quick facts Tournament details, Dates ...
2014 Scottish Open Grand Prix
Tournament details
Dates19 November 2014 (2014-11-19)
23 November 2014 (2014-11-23)
Total prize moneyUS$50,000
VenueEmirates Arena
LocationGlasgow, Scotland
Champions
Men's singlesFinland Ville Lang
Women's singlesJapan Sayaka Sato
Men's doublesDenmark Mathias Christiansen
Denmark David Daugaard
Women's doublesBulgaria Gabriela Stoeva
Bulgaria Stefani Stoeva
Mixed doublesScotland Robert Blair
Scotland Imogen Bankier
Close

Men's singles

Seeds

  1. Netherlands Eric Pang (first round)
  2. Sweden Henri Hurskainen (second round)
  3. Germany Dieter Domke (withdrew)
  4. Finland Ville Lang (champion)
  5. Indonesia Andre Kurniawan Tedjono (third round)
  6. Denmark Rasmus Fladberg (withdrew)
  7. India Anand Pawar (semifinals)
  8. Denmark Joachim Persson (third round)
  9. Denmark Emil Holst (quarterfinals)
  10. Chinese Taipei Wang Tzu-wei (final)
  11. Ukraine Dmytro Zavadsky (semifinals)
  12. France Lucas Corvee (first round)
  13. Czech Republic Petr Koukal (quarterfinals)
  14. France Thomas Rouxel (third round)
  15. Estonia Raul Must (second round)
  16. Czech Republic Jan Frohlich (first round)

Finals

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
               
11 Ukraine Dmytro Zavadsky 21 21
13 Czech Republic Petr Koukal 16 16
11 Ukraine Dmytro Zavadsky 21 17 18
4 Finland Ville Lang 18 21 21
4 Finland Ville Lang 21 21
9 Denmark Emil Holst 10 18
4 Finland Ville Lang 17 22 21
10 Chinese Taipei Wang Tzu-wei 21 20 16
7 India Anand Pawar 21 14 21
  Belgium Yuhan Tan 16 21 10
7 India Anand Pawar 23 14
10 Chinese Taipei Wang Tzu-wei 25 21
  Denmark Christian Lind Thomsen 16 21 15
10 Chinese Taipei Wang Tzu-wei 21 18 21

Women's singles

Seeds

  1. Scotland Kirsty Gilmour (semifinals)
  2. Spain Beatriz Corrales (finals)
  3. Bulgaria Linda Zetchiri (quarterfinals)
  4. Germany Karin Schnaase (quarterfinals)
  5. Japan Kaori Imabeppu (withdrew)
  6. France Sashina Vignes Waran (withdrew)
  7. Russia Natalia Perminova (withdrew)
  8. Denmark Anna Thea Madsen (second round)

Finals

Semifinals Final
          
1 Scotland Kirsty Gilmour 21 20 12
  Japan Sayaka Sato 16 22 21
  Japan Sayaka Sato 21 21
2 Spain Beatriz Corrales 18 9
  India Saili Rane 13 22
2 Spain Beatriz Corrales 21 24

Men's doubles

Women's doubles

Mixed doubles

Seeds

  1. Scotland Robert Blair / Imogen Bankier (champion)
  2. Germany Max Schwenger / Carla Nelte (semifinals)
  3. Germany Peter Kaesbauer / Isabel Herttrich (semifinals)
  4. Denmark Niclas Nohr / Sara Thygesen (finals)
  5. Canada Toby Ng / Alex Bruce (quarterfinals)
  6. Sweden Jonathan Nordh / Emelie Fabbeke (second round)
  7. France Ronan Labar / Emilie Lefel (quarterfinals)
  8. France Gaetan Mittelheisser / Audrey Fontaine (quarterfinals)

Finals

Semifinals Final
          
1 Scotland Robert Blair
Scotland Imogen Bankier
17 21 21
3 Germany Peter Kaesbauer
Germany Isabel Herttrich
21 15 14
1 Scotland Robert Blair
Scotland Imogen Bankier
21 21
4 Denmark Niclas Nohr
Denmark Sara Thygesen
18 14
4 Denmark Niclas Nohr
Denmark Sara Thygesen
21 19 21
2 Germany Max Schwenger
Germany Carla Nelte
16 21 10

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI