Wu Dixi

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Born (1962-08-09) 9 August 1962 (age 63)
Yearsactive1981-1986
Height163.5 cm (5 ft 4 in)[1]
CountryChina
Wu Dixi
吴迪西
Personal information
Born (1962-08-09) 9 August 1962 (age 63)
Years active1981-1986
Height163.5 cm (5 ft 4 in)[1]
Sport
CountryChina
SportBadminton
HandednessLeft
Medal record
Women's badminton
Representing  China
World Championships
Gold medal – first place1983 CopenhagenWomen's doubles
Silver medal – second place1985 CalgaryWomen's doubles
World Cup
Gold medal – first place1984 JakartaWomen's doubles
Gold medal – first place1985 JakartaWomen's doubles
Uber Cup
Gold medal – first place1984 Kuala LumpurWomen's team
Gold medal – first place1986 JakartaWomen's team
Asian Games
Gold medal – first place1982 New DelhiWomen's team
Bronze medal – third place1982 New DelhiWomen's doubles

Wu Dixi (Chinese: 吴迪西, born 1962 in Nanhai, Guangdong) is a retired Chinese female badminton player.

Wu was part of a cadre of Chinese players who dominated women's international badminton after China became a member of the International Badminton Federation in 1981. She won the 1982 and 1984 All-England Championships and the 1983 IBF World Championships in women's doubles with Lin Ying. Wu played on the world champion Chinese Uber Cup (women's international) teams of 1984 and 1986. She was perhaps world class badminton's most effective practitioner of the "spin serve," in which the shuttle is struck on the side of the feathers rather than on the cork—producing a highly erratic flight, until it was banned by the International Badminton Federation (now Badminton World Federation) after her first All England victory.[2][3] Though primarily a doubles player, Wu won singles at both the German and Swedish Opens in 1982. She was retired from badminton in 1986 due to severe back and knee injuries.[4]

Post-retirement

Wu instantly married to an Indonesian businessman directly after retiring and moving on to Indonesia to live with her husband. In 1994, she used to coach for Malaysian women's badminton team where she addressed the unfair treatment between the male players and female players in the squad that hinders the female athletes progress.[5] Nowadays, she is frequently handling badminton training camps in Guangzhou and more places in China.[6]

Achievements

References

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