Stanislav Yevgenyevich Pukhov (Russian: Станислав Евгеньевич Пухов; born 28 June 1977 in Moscow) is a Russian badminton player.[1] He is a five-time national champion in the men's singles (1998, 2001, 2003, 2005, and 2007), and also, defeated France's Arif Rasidi for the championship title and a consolation prize of $10,000 in the same division at the 2005 French Open in Paris.[2]

Stanislav Pukhov
Personal information
Birth nameStanislav Yevgenyevich
Pukhov
Country Russia
Born (1977-06-28) 28 June 1977 (age 46)
Moscow, Russian SFSR
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Weight80 kg (176 lb)
Highest ranking48
Current ranking230 (21 February 2013)
BWF profile

Pukhov qualified for the men's singles at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, after he was ranked sixtieth in the world by the Badminton World Federation. He received a bye for the second preliminary round before losing out to Lithuania's Kęstutis Navickas, with a score of 12–21 and 17–21.[3]

Achievements edit

BWF Grand Prix (1 title, 2 runners-up) edit

The BWF Grand Prix has two level such as Grand Prix and Grand Prix Gold. It is a series of badminton tournaments, sanctioned by Badminton World Federation (BWF) since 2007. The World Badminton Grand Prix sanctioned by International Badminton Federation (IBF) since 1983.

Men's singles

Year Tournament Opponent Score Result
2010 Russian Open   Takuma Ueda 17–21, 17–21   Runner-up
2008 Russian Open   Dicky Palyama 12–21, 18–21   Runner-up
2005 Russian Open   Vladimir Malkov 3–15, 15–6, 15–8   Winner
  BWF Grand Prix Gold tournament
  BWF & IBF Grand Prix tournament

BWF International Challenge/Series (13 titles, 7 runners-up) edit

Men's singles

Year Tournament Opponent Score Result
2010 Lao International   Tommy Sugiarto 19–21, 13–21   Runner-up
2009 White Nights   Dmytro Zavadsky 0–21, 0–21 disq.   Runner-up
2008 Italian International   Wong Choong Hann 16–21, 15–21   Runner-up
2007 White Nights   Bobby Milroy 24–22, 11–21, 21–19   Winner
2005 French International   Arif Rasidi 15–12, 15–3   Winner
2004 Russian International   Evgenij Dremin 15–5, 17–16   Winner
2004 Portugal International   Przemysław Wacha 11–15, 15–3, 15–9   Winner
2002 Hungarian International   Aamir Ghaffar 15–13, 4–15, 15–6   Winner
2002 Slovak International   Jacek Niedźwiedzki 15–5, 11–15, 15–7   Winner
2002 Bulgarian International   Kasperi Salo 15–3, 15–12   Winner
1997 Bulgarian International   Joris van Soerland 9–10, 9–0, 9–6, 7–9, 9–7   Winner

Men's doubles

Year Tournament Partner Opponent Score Result
2014 Lithuanian International   Sergey Sirant   Denis Grachev
  Artem Karpov
Walkover   Runner-up
2003 Spanish International   Nikolai Zuyev   Michael Lamp
  Mathias Boe
4–15, 9–15   Runner-up
2003 Austrian International   Nikolai Zuyev   Michał Łogosz
  Robert Mateusiak
6–15, 17–16, 11–15   Runner-up
2003 French International   Nikolai Zuyev   Joachim Fischer Nielsen
  Carsten Mogensen
13–15, 9–15   Runner-up
2002 Welsh International   Nikolai Zuyev   Peter Jeffrey
  Julian Robertson
15–3, 15–11   Winner
2002 Hungarian International   Nikolai Zuyev   Evgenij Isakov
  Andrej Zholobov
15–17, 15–3, 15–5   Winner
2002 Slovak International   Nikolai Zuyev   Michał Łogosz
  Robert Mateusiak
15–10, 8–15, 15–12   Winner
2002 Bulgarian International   Nikolai Zuyev   Evgenij Isakov
  Andrej Zholobov
15–5, 15–9   Winner
2001 Slovenian International   Nikolai Zuyev   Wouter Claes
  Frédéric Mawet
7–2, 1–7, 7–5, 7–3   Winner
  BWF International Challenge tournament
  BWF International Series tournament
  BWF Future Series tournament

References edit

  1. ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Stanislav Pukhov". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
  2. ^ Sachetat, Raphael (2 July 2007). "Europe Cup – Local favourites bow to talented Russians". Badzine. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
  3. ^ "Men's Singles Round of 32". NBC Olympics. Retrieved 23 February 2013.

External links edit