Li Yongbo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born (1962-09-18) 18 September 1962 (age 63)
CountryChina
EventMen's doubles
Li Yongbo
李永波
Personal information
Born (1962-09-18) 18 September 1962 (age 63)
Sport
CountryChina
SportBadminton
EventMen's doubles
Medal record
Men's badminton
Representing  China
Olympic Games
Bronze medal – third place1992 BarcelonaMen's doubles
World Championships
Gold medal – first place1987 BeijingMen's doubles
Gold medal – first place1989 JakartaMen's doubles
Silver medal – second place1985 CalgaryMen's doubles
Bronze medal – third place1991 CopenhagenMen's doubles
World Cup
Gold medal – first place1988 BangkokMen's doubles
Silver medal – second place1984 JakartaMen's doubles
Silver medal – second place1985 JakartaMen's doubles
Silver medal – second place1987 Kuala LumpurMen's doubles
Silver medal – second place1989 GuangzhouMen's doubles
Bronze medal – third place1990 Bandung/JakartaMen's doubles
Bronze medal – third place1991 MacauMen's doubles
Thomas Cup
Gold medal – first place1986 JakartaMen's team
Gold medal – first place1988 Kuala LumpurMen's team
Gold medal – first place1990 TokyoMen's team
Bronze medal – third place1992 Kuala LumpurMen's team
Sudirman Cup
Bronze medal – third place1989 JakartaMixed team
Bronze medal – third place1991 CopenhaganMixed team
Asian Games
Gold medal – first place1990 BeijingMen's doubles
Gold medal – first place1990 BeijingMen's team
Silver medal – second place1986 SeoulMen's doubles
Silver medal – second place1986 SeoulMen's team
Asian Championships
Gold medal – first place1987 SemarangMen's team
Gold medal – first place1989 ShanghaiMen's team

Li Yongbo (Chinese: 李永波; pinyin: Lǐ Yǒngbō; born September 18, 1962) is a retired Chinese male badminton player and the former head coach of Chinese National Badminton Team.

As a player, he was a men's doubles specialist noted for his quickness, reflexes, and power. From the mid-1980s to the early 1990s he shared numerous international titles with his regular partner Tian Bingyi. They were contemporaries and rivals of the famous Korean pair Park Joo-bong and Kim Moon-soo, largely dividing badminton's biggest doubles events between them for about eight seasons. Among many other tournaments around the world Li and Tian captured the (then biennial) World Championships in 1987 and 1989, the prestigious All-England Championships in 1987, 1988, and 1991, and the Danish Open in 1985, 1987, 1989, 1990, and 1991.[1][2][3] They also played on Chinese Thomas Cup (men's international) teams that won consecutive world team titles in 1986, 1988, and 1990. Late in their partnership they won a bronze medal in men's doubles at the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona.

As the Chinese badminton women's doubles coach during the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, his players were banned from competition for "tanking" their match against South Korea, who won the match but were also banned similarly[4] (as were the Indonesian women's doubles team). Li has admitted his role in the scandal; insiders say Li used fear tactics and intimidation to a strategic advantage in national and Olympic competition.[citation needed] By losing, his team would have avoided playing another Chinese team.

Following the conclusion of the Rio Olympics, where China won two gold medals, he stood down in 2017.[4]

Achievements

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI