I didn't see that match, but I did see them against the other Koreans in Malaysia when they lost 11 and 8. Nothing much wrong in Greys' physical fitness and power. But her match fitness was still suspect. Rotation movement was not too smooth, leaving gaps. Should be fine once she gets her bearings right. The Koreans are overrated, their only advantage is the gas tank, and nothing else. More technical pairs, even auntie pairs, could still actually beat them.
Nitya and Greysia's injure are getting better, Greysia is nearly 100% fit. http://pb-pbsi.org/app/information/newsDetail.aspx?/717
Aryono are optimistic INA can steal 2 points from WD against THA. http://pb-pbsi.org/app/information/newsDetail.aspx?/718
According to kompas, Christian Hadinata and Richard Mainaky won't be joining the team to Macau. Richard wants to concentrate on preparing his mix doubles players for All England(important for Olympic qualification). That's quite good. Better train Rijal/Debby and Tontowi hard at home. They need the training. Meanwhile, Christian cited personal reason, there is a family member who is sick
Nice pictures. Pity the girls having to wrap their knees. Must be suffering as I have also experienced it.
Indonesian Thomas-Uber Squad Gathering photos are taken from Ami Gumelar a.k.a mrs. Taufik Hidayat's twitter
INA Thomas-Uber Cup bound players will fly to Macau tomorrow (9th February), good luck Merah Putih squad
i asked her permission but she hasn't replied. if it breaks the rules then I hope Moderator can delete those photos
RI head to Macau in bid for Thomas, Uber Cups The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Thu, 02/09/2012 11:22 AM The Indonesian men’s and women’s badminton squads on Thursday head to Macau for their Asia-zone qualifiers for the Thomas and Uber Cup championships. The zone’s qualification stage will be held between Feb. 13 and 19. “I expect our Thomas and Uber Cup teams will be able to reach the final round and exceed their achievements two years ago in Kuala Lumpur,” Indonesian Badminton Association (PBSI) Djoko Santoso said as quoted by Antara news agency on Wednesday. Two years ago in Kuala Lumpur, the Indonesian men’s team finished as runner-up after losing to defending champion China in the final. The women’s team was knocked out in the semifinals by the Chinese who went on to become Uber Cup runners-up, losing to South Korea. National women’s singles coach Wong Tat Meng said that his team were fit and fully recovered from their various injuries. “[With] God’s blessing, they are all free from injury and sickness,” said Wong, who was previously concerned about singles aces Adriyanti Firdasari and Linda Wenifanetri after they were injured at the 26th SEA Games last November. The red-and-white’s Uber Cup singles squad consists of Linda, Firdasari, Maria Febe Kusumastuti and Bellaetrix Manuputty, while doubles specialists Greysia Polii, Meiliana Jauhari, Anneke Feinya Agustin, Nitya Krishinda, Lilyana Natsir and Shendy Puspa Irawati also competing. ----------------------------------------------------------- Full article : http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/02/09/ri-head-macau-bid-thomas-uber-cups.html
Uber Cup squad (against srilanka on 13th february): 1. Maria Febe Kusumastuti 2. Greysia/Meiliana 3. Lindaweni fanetri 4. Anneke feinya/Nitya Krishinda 5. Bellaetrix Manuputty good luck! source: http://pb-pbsi.org/app/information/newsDetail.aspx?/733
Badminton: Indonesia Shuttlers Begin Quest for Cup Jakarta Globe Sandy Pramuji | February 12, 2012 Indonesian shuttlers will step onto the court on Monday with one thing in mind — ending a very long wait to lift the Thomas and Uber Cups again. But the first thing the men’s and women’s teams have to do is survive the Asia zone qualifying rounds in Macau. The men’s team last lifted the Thomas Cup in 2002 when it won the world team championship in Guangdong, China. It’s been even longer for the women. The last time they won the Uber Cup was in 1996 when the legendary Susi Susanti led the team to victory in Hong Kong. China has since dominated the men’s and women’s championships. And Indonesia has recently been underperforming at major international tournaments. Not one of the country’s shuttlers has won a title at the sport’s biggest tournaments, the Super Series, since the mixed doubles team of Tontowi Ahmad and Liliyana Natsir took the top spot at the Singapore Open in June last year. But the secretary general of the Indonesian Badminton Association (PBSI), Yacob Rusdianto, said anything was possible at team events, which have a different atmosphere than individual ones. “In team events, shuttlers are representatives of the country, so they will fight harder on the court in order to make the country proud,” he said in telephone interview on Sunday. “That’s why we are optimistic about qualifying for the finals and then taking both trophies. If we don’t have that optimism, why bother playing in the championships?” The top five men’s teams and the top four women’s teams in the Asia zone qualifiers will go on to the main tournament, which takes place from May 20-27 in Wuhan, China. The men’s team looks like the surer bet to qualify after it was drawn into Group B with India, Singapore and Macau. It opens against host nation Macau today, followed by Singapore the next day and India on Wednesday. On paper, Simon Santoso and company shouldn’t have any serious problems being one of the top two teams to advance to the quarterfinals. “I think if the players are all focused and respect all of their opponents, we’ll win the group,” said Christian Hadinata, national team coach. “The toughest matches will be in the quarterfinal where we could face either Malaysia or South Korea.” The country’s top singles player, Simon, said he was ready for the competition and would give his all. “We’ve been training hard for this and we’ll try not to disappoint,” he said before the team left for Macau on Thursday. The women’s team could have a much more difficult time of it in Macau. Indonesia was drawn into Group Y where it will face Sri Lanka, Kazakhstan and regional rival Thailand. Advancing to the quarterfinals is a safe bet, but where Indonesia finishes in its group is of the utmost importance. Eleven-time champion China is in Group W with India and Malaysia, and in the last eight, the Group Y runner-up will meet the Group W winner. So if Indonesia fails to win its group, it will likely have to beat China to reach the Uber Cup finals. “We’ll take it one game at a time. We don’t want to think about the quarterfinals or China,” said doubles specialist Nitya Krishinda Maheswari. The women’s team starts its group campaign against Sri Lanka today.
Does anybody know why KinDra didn't compete against Macau yesterday? And possible if KinDra not into main INA squad?
They are independent players, not under national team anymore. Unless the national team manager willingly to call them up for the next match line up...