Chen Xingdong

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born (1970-04-02) 2 April 1970 (age 55)
Sichuan, China
Height1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Weight75 kg (165 lb)
CountryChina
Chen Xingdong
陈兴东
Personal information
Born (1970-04-02) 2 April 1970 (age 55)
Sichuan, China
Height1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Weight75 kg (165 lb)
Sport
CountryChina
SportBadminton
HandednessRight
Mixed doubles
Highest ranking3 (June 1996)
BWF profile
Medal record
Men's badminton
Representing  China
World Cup
Silver medal – second place1994 Ho Chi MinhMixed doubles
Bronze medal – third place1996 JakartaMixed doubles
Bronze medal – third place1992 GuangzhouMixed doubles
Sudirman Cup
Gold medal – first place1997 GlasgowMixed team
Gold medal – first place1995 LausanneMixed team
Asian Games
Bronze medal – third place1994 HiroshimaMen's team
Asian Championships
Gold medal – first place1994 ShanghaiMixed doubles
East Asian Games
Gold medal – first place1993 ShanghaiMixed doubles
Gold medal – first place1993 ShanghaiMen's team

Chen Xingdong (Chinese: 陈兴东; pinyin: Chén Xīngdōng; born 2 April 1970) is a Chinese former badminton player. He competed at the 1996 Summer Olympics in the mixed doubles event together with his partner Peng Xinyong. Chen was part of the Sichuan Sports Technology College team since 1984 and retired from the international tournament in 1997. In 1998, he was selected as a coach in Sichuan Province team and at the same year he join national team as a men's team coach. In early 2000, he focused as a mixed doubles coach.[1]

His career in badminton started to appear in 1993 when he and his mixed doubles partner Sun Man won the gold medal at the 1993 East Asian Games, 1993 China Open, and 1994 Asian Championships. Chen qualified to compete at the 1994 World Cup with Gu Jun and finished as a runner-up. In 1995, he cooperated with Wang Xiaoyuan, won the mixed doubles title at the Swedish Open, and third place at the China Open.

In the middle of 1995, he teamed-up with Peng Xinyong. The duo became the champion at the 1995 Denmark and China Open, 1996 Polish Open, and qualified to compete at the 1996 Summer Olympics finished in the fourth place after lose a bronze medal match to Liu Jianjun and Sun Man in straight games 15–7, 4–15, 8–15. Chen two times helps the national mixed team clinched the Sudirman Cup in 1995 and 1997. He reached a career high as world No. 3 in June 1996 together with Peng.[2]

World Cup

References

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