Badminton at the 1967 SEAP Games

Badminton events for the 1967 SEAP Games were held at Bangkok, Thailand, between 9 and 16 December 1967. Host Thailand won gold medals in three disciplines while Malaysia stood second in the tally by winning two gold medals.[1][2][3]

Badminton
at the 1967 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games
VenueKittikachorn Stadium
LocationBangkok, Thailand
Dates9 – 16 December 1967
Nations6
← 1965
1969 →

Medalists

edit
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's singles
details
Sangob Rattanusorn
  Thailand
Somsook Boonyasukhanonda
  Thailand
Billy Ng
  Malaysia
Yew Cheng Hoe
  Malaysia
Women's singles
details
Thongkam Kingmanee
  Thailand
Rosalind Singha Ang
  Malaysia
Sumol Chanklum
  Thailand
Myint Myint Khin
  Burma
Men's doubles
details
Ng Boon Bee
Tan Yee Khan
  Malaysia
Narong Bhornchima
Raphi Kanchanaraphi
  Thailand
Chavalert Chumkum
Sangob Rattanusorn
  Thailand
Khor Cheng Chye
Yew Cheng Hoe
  Malaysia
Women's doubles
details
Rosalind Singha Ang
Teoh Siew Yong
  Malaysia
Ho Cheng Yoke
Sylvia Tan
  Malaysia
Boopha Kaenthong
Mulliga Phitakarnop
  Thailand
Sumol Chanklum
Thongkam Kingmanee
  Thailand
Mixed doubles
details
Chirasak Champakao
Sumol Chanklum
  Thailand
Sila Ulao
Mulliga Phitakarnop
  Thailand
Lee Guan Chong
Yap Hei Lin
  Malaysia
Ng Boon Bee
Teoh Siew Yong
  Malaysia

Semifinal results

edit
Discipline Winner Runner-up Score
Men's singles   Somsook Boonyasukhanonda   Yew Cheng Hoe 9–15, 15–12, 15–8
  Sangob Rattanusorn   Billy Ng 15–9, 15–6
Women's singles   Rosalind Singha Ang   Sumol Chanklum 11–3, 11–6
  Thongkam Kingmanee   Myint Myint Khin 11–6, 11–8
Men's doubles   Ng Boon Bee
& Tan Yee Khan
  Chavalert Chumkum
& Sangob Rattanusorn
15–11, 15–10
  Narong Bhornchima
& Raphi Kanchanaraphi
  Khor Cheng Chye
& Yew Cheng Hoe
15–13, 15–3
Women's doubles   Rosalind Singha Ang
& Teoh Siew Yong
  Boopha Kaenthong
& Mulliga Phitakarnop
15–5, 15–4
  Sylvia Tan
& Ho Cheng Yoke
  Sumol Chanklum
& Thongkam Kingmanee
15–13, 15–5
Mixed doubles   Chirasak Champakao
& Sumol Chanklum
  Ng Boon Bee
& Teoh Siew Yong
15–6, 15–10
  Sila Ulao
& Mulliga Phitakarnop
  Lee Guan Chong
& Yap Hei Lin
9–15, 15–5, 15–6

Final results

edit
Discipline Winner Finalist Score
Men's singles[4]   Sangob Rattanusorn   Somsook Boonyasukhanonda 18–17, 17–14
Women's singles   Thongkam Kingmanee   Rosalind Singha Ang 11–8, 2–11, 11–3
Men's doubles   Ng Boon Bee
& Tan Yee Khan
  Raphi Kanchanaraphi
& Narong Bhornchima
15–7, 15–8
Women's doubles   Rosalind Singha Ang
& Teoh Siew Yong
  Sylvia Tan
& Ho Cheng Yoke
18–17, 15–8
Mixed doubles   Chirasak Champakao
& Sumol Chanklum
  Sila Ulao
& Mulliga Phitakarnop
7–15, 15–7, 15–4

Medal table

edit

  *   Host nation (Thailand)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Thailand (THA)*33410
2  Malaysia (MAS)2259
3  Burma (BIR)0011
Totals (3 entries)551020

References

edit
  1. ^ Siebel, Norman; Rahman, Mansoor; Frida, Ernest (15 December 1967). "Malaysia's long, dreary day". The Straits Times. p. 22. Retrieved 22 December 2022 – via NewspaperSG.
  2. ^ Yaw Chong, Lim (16 December 1967). "All the Seap results". The Straits Times. p. 23. Retrieved 22 December 2022 – via NewspaperSG.
  3. ^ "Sukan SAT berakhir". Berita Harian (in Malay). 17 December 1967. p. 8. Retrieved 22 December 2022 – via NewspaperSG.
  4. ^ Yaw Chong, Lim (17 December 1967). "Badminton". The Straits Times. p. 24. Retrieved 22 December 2022 – via NewspaperSG.
edit