Yvonne Kelly | |
---|---|
Personal information | |
Country | Ireland |
Born | c. 1935 |
Yvonne Kelly (born c. 1935) is an Irish badminton player.
Yvonne Kelly is the daughter of badminton player Billy Kelly. [1]
Kelly won her first titles at the Irish National Badminton Championships in 1956. She won the Irish Open for the first time two years later, and the Scottish Open in 1963. In total, she won 25 national titles and the Irish Open 10 times. [2] She won mixed doubles with Cyril W. Wilkinson 7 times from 1962 to 1971. [3]
She was coached by Frank Peard, along with fellow high ranking players including James 'Chick' Doyle and Mary Bryan. [4] Until 2019, Bryan and Kelly held the record for the most Irish National Titles won as a pair in badminton. [5]
Year | Tournament | Event | Winner |
---|---|---|---|
1954 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's doubles | R. Gobson / Yvonne Kelly |
1956 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's singles | Yvonne Kelly |
1957 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary O'Sullivan |
1957 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's singles | Yvonne Kelly |
1958 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's singles | Yvonne Kelly |
1958 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary O'Sullivan |
1958 | Irish Open | Women's singles | Yvonne Kelly |
1959 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary O'Sullivan |
1960 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary O'Sullivan |
1960 | Irish Open | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary O'Sullivan |
1961 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary O'Sullivan |
1961 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's singles | Yvonne Kelly |
1962 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Mixed | Cyril W. Wilkinson / Yvonne Kelly |
1962 | Irish Open | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary O'Sullivan |
1963 | Scottish Open | Women's doubles | Mary O'Sullivan / Yvonne Kelly |
1963 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Mixed | C. W. Wilkinson / Yvonne Kelly |
1963 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary O'Sullivan |
1965 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's singles | Yvonne Kelly |
1965 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary Bryan |
1966 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Mixed | C. W. Wilkinson / Yvonne Kelly |
1966 | Irish Open | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary Bryan |
1966 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary Bryan |
1967 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's singles | Yvonne Kelly |
1967 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Mixed | C. W. Wilkinson / Yvonne Kelly |
1967 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / James B. Leslie |
1968 | Irish Open | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary Bryan |
1969 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Mixed | C. W. Wilkinson / Yvonne Kelly |
1970 | Irish Open | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Sue Peard |
1970 | Irish Open | Women's singles | Yvonne Kelly |
1970 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Mixed | C. W. Wilkinson / Yvonne Kelly |
1971 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Mixed | C. W. Wilkinson / Yvonne Kelly |
1971 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary Bryan |
1972 | Irish Open | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary Bryan |
1972 | Irish Open | Women's singles | Yvonne Kelly |
1972 | Irish National Badminton Championships | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Mary Bryan |
1976 | Irish Open | Women's doubles | Yvonne Kelly / Barbara Beckett |
Zhang Ning is a former badminton player from the People's Republic of China. She won the Olympic gold medal twice for women's singles in both 2004 and 2008. She has played badminton on the world scene since the mid-1990s and has been particularly successful since 2002 while in her late twenties and early thirties, relatively late for singles at the highest level, and especially for top players in the Chinese system who are developed very early. She is known for her consistency of shot, deception and constant pressure, dictating the pace of rallies and working her opponents in all four corners of the court. She is the only female player to win consecutive Olympic singles gold medals. She also became World champion in 2003 and has a total of five medals of all colours in the competition.
Saina Nehwal is an Indian professional badminton player. A former world no. 1, she has won over 24 international titles, which includes eleven Superseries titles. Although she reached the world's 2nd in the 2009, it was only in 2015 that she was able to attain the world no. 1 ranking, thereby becoming the only female player from India and overall the second Indian player – after Prakash Padukone – to achieve this feat. She has represented India three times in the Olympics, winning a bronze medal in her second appearance.
Judith Meulendijks is a former badminton player from the Netherlands.
Susan Devlin Peard is a former badminton player who represented both the US and Ireland in international competition. She is the daughter of J. Frank Devlin, an Irish badminton great, who moved his family to the United States in the late 1930s. She is the older sister of Judy Devlin Hashman, with whom she won numerous international women's doubles championships, including six titles at the prestigious All-England Championships. The Devlin sisters won a record ten United States women's doubles titles between 1953 and 1966. They also formed a doubles pairing that won all of its individual matches for the world champion U.S. Uber Cup teams of 1957 and 1960. In 1960 Susan Devlin married Irish badminton player Frank Peard and thereafter resided in Ireland. She won two Irish national women's doubles titles and played Uber Cup for Ireland in the '62-'63 and '65-'66 campaigns. In 1976 she was inducted into the U.S. Badminton Hall of Fame, now known as the Walk of Fame. In 2009, both Susan and Judy were inducted into the Goucher College athletics Hall of Fame.
Wang Shixian is a retired Chinese professional badminton player. She is a former World No. 1 in women's singles.
Mary Sinnott born 1943 in Aughfad, County Wexford as Mary Dinan, is a former camogie and badminton player.
Pusarla Venkata Sindhu is an Indian professional badminton player. Over the course of her career, Sindhu has won medals at multiple tournaments including Olympics and on the BWF circuit including a gold at the 2019 World Championships. She is the first Indian to become the Badminton World Champion and only the second individual athlete from India to win two consecutive medals at the Olympic Games. She rose to a career-high world ranking of no. 2 in April 2017.
Ratchanok Intanon is a Thai badminton player who became the first Thai to become No.1 in women's singles. She is known for her relaxed hitting motion and light footwork, which has been described as 'balletic' by commentators such as Gillian Clark. She became world champion in women's singles in 2013 at the age of just 18, making her the youngest person to do so.
Tai Tzu-ying is a Taiwanese professional badminton player. At the age of 22, she became world No. 1 in the women's singles on December 2016, and holds the record for being only Women's singles player ranked at the top in BWF history with 185 weeks.
Li Xuerui is a retired Chinese professional badminton player. She is one of the most successful players of her time. She was a gold medalist at 2012 London Olympics in the women's singles event and was the silver medalists in the 2013 and 2014 World Championships. Li Xuerui won fourteen Superseries titles, confirming her status as China's second most successful player after Wang Yihan. She reached a career high of no. 1 in the women's singles for 124 weeks. Li graduated with a BA from Huaqiao University.
Sung Ji-hyun is a South Korean badminton player from Seoul. She is an Asian Championship gold medalist, a two-time Summer Universiade gold medalist, and a World Championship bronze medalist. She was also part of South Korean teams that won the 2010 Uber Cup, 2017 Sudirman Cup, as well the team event at the 2013 and 2015 Summer Universiade. She competed at the 2010, 2014 and 2018 Asian Games, and at the 2012 and 2016 Summer Olympics. Sung is married to compatriot men's singles player, Son Wan-ho.
Nozomi Okuhara is a Japanese badminton player. A former World's No. 1 in BWF rankings for the women's singles, she is well known for her speed, agility and endurance. She won a bronze at the 2016 Summer Olympics, and gold medal at the 2017 World Championships. She is a also two time winner of the prestigious All England Open Championship winning in 2016, 2021 respectievely.
Akane Yamaguchi is the first ever Japanese badminton singles player to be ranked as World Number 1 in the BWF Ranking, and the youngest shuttler to win a BWF super series title, winning the Japan open 2013 at the age of just 16 years and three months. . She won the women's singles titles at the World Junior Championships in 2013 and 2014, the Asian Junior Championships in 2014, and the Asian Championships in 2019. She was a part of the winning Japanese team at the Asian Junior Championships in 2012, the Asia Mixed Team Championships in 2017, the Asia Women's Team Championships in 2018 and 2020, and at the Uber Cup in 2018. Yamaguchi was named the Most Promising Player of the Year by the Badminton World Federation in 2013 and 2014 and the Honorary Citizen Award by the mayor of Katsuyama in 2018.
James Patrick 'Chick' Doyle was a former Irish badminton player and coach. He was coached by Frank Peard and won eleven Irish National Badminton Championships titles in men's singles and doubles in the period 1954–1964.
Frank Peard was an Irish badminton player who played for Ireland internationally in the 1940s and 1950s.
Mary Bryan was an Irish badminton player. During her career, she was deemed to be one of the top 5 badminton players in the world.
Olive Wilson was a Northern Irish badminton player.
Barbara J. Good was an Irish badminton player.
Nora Conway was an Irish badminton player.
Arthur Geoffrey Trapnell (1911–2000) was an Irish badminton player, national men's singles champion, sporting administrator, and president of the Badminton Union of Ireland.