Badminton at the 2004 South Asian Federation Games

Badminton[1] at the 2004 South Asian Games was held in Rodham Hall in Islamabad, the capital city of Pakistan in the months of March and April. This was the first time badminton was introduced in the subcontinental games, which included men's and women's singles competitions; men's, women's and mixed doubles competitions along with men's and women's team events.[2][3][4][5]

2004 South Asian Federation Games
Tournament details
Dates29 March – 7 April
Edition1st
VenueRodham Hall, Islamabad Sports Complex
LocationIslamabad, Pakistan
2006 Colombo

Medal summary edit

Medal table edit

  *   Host nation (Pakistan)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  India (IND)75012
2  Sri Lanka (SRI)0178
3  Pakistan (PAK)*0156
Totals (3 entries)771226

Medalists edit

Discipline Gold Silver Bronze
Men's singles   Chetan Anand   Abhinn Shyam Gupta   U. D. R. P. Kumara
  Wajid Ali Chaudhry
Women's singles   Trupti Murgunde   B. R. Meenakshi   Renu Hettiarachchige
  Pameesha Dishanthi
Men's doubles   Rupesh Kumar K. T.
  Marcos Bristow
  Jaseel P. Ismail
  J. B. S. Vidyadhar
  Duminda Jayakody
  Thushara Edirisinghe
  Rizwan Rana
  Omar Zeeshan
Women's doubles   Jwala Gutta
  Shruti Kurien
  Fathima Nazneen
  Manjusha Kanwar
  Renu Hettiarachchige
  Pameesha Dishanthi
  Asma Butt
  Uzma Butt
Mixed doubles   Jaseel P. Ismail
  Jwala Gutta
  Marcos Bristow
  Manjusha Kanwar
  Mirza Ali Yar Beg
  Saima Manzoor
  Thushara Edirisinghe
  Renu Hettiarachchige
Men's team   India

Abhinn Shyam Gupta
Chetan Anand
Rupesh Kumar
Jaseel P. Ismail
J. B. S. Vidyadhar
Utsav Mishra
Marcos Bristow
Hemant Duggal

  Pakistan

Wajid Ali Chaudhry
Ahsan Qamar
Omar Zeeshan
Rizwan Rana
Mir Tahir Ishaque
Mirza Ali Yar Beg
Waqas Masood
Ashraf Masih

  Sri Lanka

Niluka Karunaratne
U. D. R. P. Kumara
Chameera Kumarapperuma
Duminda Jayakody
Niroshan John

Women's team   India

B. R. Meenakshi
Trupti Murgunde
Krishna Deka Raja
Aparna Balan
Jwala Gutta
Shruti Kurien
Fathima Nazneen
Manjusha Kanwar

  Sri Lanka

Renu Hettiarachchige
Pameesha Dishanthi
Nadeesha Gayanthi
Kalpana Pasangi
Amali Amarasinghe
Thilini Jayasinghe

  Pakistan

Asma Butt
Ayesha Akram
Uzma Butt
Farzana Saleem
Saima Manzoor
Farzana Shaheen
Zahida Ali
Sadia Arshad

Results edit

Men's singles edit

Semifinal Final
          
  Abhinn Shyam Gupta 15 15
  U. D. R. P. Kumara 13 7
  Abhinn Shyam Gupta 8 15 13
  Chetan Anand 15 10 15
  Wajid Ali Chaudhry 10 4
  Chetan Anand 15 15

Women's singles edit

Semifinal Final
          
  Trupti Murgunde 11 11
  Pamisha Dishanthi 0 1
  Trupti Murgunde 9 11 13
  B. R. Meenakshi 11 7 10
  Renu Hettiarachchige 8 2
  B. R. Meenakshi 11 11

Men's doubles edit

Semi-finals Final
          
  Marcos Bristow
  Rupesh Kumar K. T.
15 15
  Thushara Edirisinghe
  Duminda Jayakody
10 6
  Marcos Bristow
  Rupesh Kumar K. T.
15 15
  Jaseel P. Ismail
  J. B. S. Vidyadhar
8 4
  Rizwan Rana
  Omar Zeeshan
11 2
  Jaseel P. Ismail
  J. B. S. Vidyadhar
15 15

Women's doubles edit

Semi-finals Final
          
  Jwala Gutta
  Shruti Kurien
15 15
  Asma Butt
  Uzma Butt
3 1
  Jwala Gutta
  Shruti Kurien
15 15
  Manjusha Kanwar
  Fathima Nazneen
6 3
  Pameesha Dishanthi
  Renu Hettiarachchige
3 4
  Manjusha Kanwar
  Fathima Nazneen
15 15

Mixed doubles edit

Semi-finals Final
          
  Jaseel P. Ismail
  Jwala Gutta
15 15
  Mirza Ali Yar Beg
  Saima Manzoor
4 2
  Jaseel P. Ismail
  Jwala Gutta
15 15
  Marcos Bristow
  Manjusha Kanwar
6 3
  Thushara Edirisinghe
  Renu Hettiarachchige
5 17 10
  Marcos Bristow
  Manjusha Kanwar
15 15 15

References edit

  1. ^ "It will be South Asian Games". Rediff.com. 2 April 2004. Archived from the original on 15 June 2020. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  2. ^ "2004 Islamabad 9th South Asian Games – Badminton". Olympic Council of Asia. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Sport – 9th SAF Games results". The Hindu. 5 April 2004. Archived from the original on 27 June 2004. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
  4. ^ "Clean sweep by Indian shuttlers". Rediff.com. 5 April 2004. Archived from the original on 2 November 2021. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
  5. ^ "India shuttlers sail into finals". Dawn. 5 April 2004. Archived from the original on 3 January 2020. Retrieved 19 August 2011.