2014 BWF World Junior Championships – Teams event
Tournament details | |||
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Dates | 7–11 April[1] | ||
Edition | 16th | ||
Level | International | ||
Nations | 33 | ||
Venue | Stadium Sultan Abdul Halim | ||
Location | Alor Setar, Malaysia | ||
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The Team event tournament of the 2014 BWF World Junior Championships was the sixteenth tournament of the BWF World Junior Championships. It was held from April 7–11, 2014 in Alor Setar, Malaysia. According to the Badminton World Federation (BWF) 35 teams have confirmed their participation.[2] The winner of the tournament would have Suhandinata Cup for about a year until the next BWF World Junior Championships Team Event is held.
Seedings
The seedings for teams competing in the tournament were released on March 24, 2014. It was based on aggregated points from the best players in the world junior ranking, the result of last BWF World Junior Championships team event, and also the result of last continental junior event. The tournament was divided into four groups and each group has 2 subgroups, with South Korea and China were the two top seeds, and 2 teams (Indonesia and Japan) in the seeded 3-4 were also put into the same group. another 4 teams were put in the second groups. Eight teams (seeded 9-16) were seeded into third groups and the last sixteen teams were seeded into last groups. The draw was held on the same day in Kuala Lumpur.[3]
Group 1
(Seeded 1-4)
Group 2
(Seeded 5-8)
Group 3
(Seeded 9-16)
Group 4
(Seeded 17-35)
- Canada
- Australia
- Sri Lanka
- Czech Republic
- South Africa
- Spain
- Armenia
- United States
- Botswana
- Philippines
- Uzbekistan
- England
- Netherlands
Afghanistan(Withdrew)- Macau
- Slovenia
- Mongolia (Debut)
- Egypt
Zambia(Withdrew)
Group stage
Qualified for quarterfinals |
Group W1
|
Group W2
|
Group X1
|
Group X2
|
Group Y1
|
Group Y2
|
Group Z1
|
Group Z2
|
Knockout stage
Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final | ||||||||||||
W1 | South Korea | 0 | ||||||||||||
W2 | Thailand | 3 | ||||||||||||
W2 | Thailand | 2 | ||||||||||||
X1 | Indonesia | 3 | ||||||||||||
X1 | Indonesia | 3 | ||||||||||||
X2 | Hong Kong | 0 | ||||||||||||
X1 | Indonesia | 0 | ||||||||||||
Z1 | China | 3 | ||||||||||||
Y1 | Japan | 3 | ||||||||||||
Y2 | Chinese Taipei | 2 | ||||||||||||
Y1 | Japan | 2 | ||||||||||||
Z1 | China | 3 | ||||||||||||
Z1 | China | 3 | ||||||||||||
Z2 | Malaysia | 1 |
Final
Indonesia 0 | Stadium Sultan Abdul Halim Court 1 11 April 2014 [4] | China 3 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Final team ranking
- China [2]
- Indonesia [3/4]
- Thailand [5/8]
- Japan [3/4]
- South Korea [1]
- Malaysia [5/8]
- Chinese Taipei [5/8]
- Hong Kong [5/8]
- Denmark [9/16]
- Singapore [9/16]
- Germany [9/16]
- Vietnam [9/16]
- India [9/16]
- Russia [9/16]
- Philippines
- Spain
- England
- Netherlands
- Canada
- United States
- France [9/16]
- Bulgaria [9/16]
- Australia
- Botswana
- Sri Lanka
- Slovenia
- Egypt
- South Africa
- Czech Republic
- Uzbekistan
- Armenia
- Mongolia
- Macau
Afghanistan(Withdrew)Zambia(Withdrew)
References
- v
- t
- e
- Jakarta 1992
- Kuala Lumpur 1994
- Silkeborg 1996
- Melbourne 1998
- Guangzhou 2000
- Pretoria 2002
- Richmond 2004
- Incheon 2006
- Waitakere City 2007
- Pune 2008
- Alor Setar 2009
- Guadalajara 2010
- Taipei 2011
- Chiba 2012
- Bangkok 2013
- Alor Setar 2014
- Lima 2015
- Bilbao 2016
- Yogyakarta 2017
- Markham 2018
- Kazan 2019
Auckland 2020Chengdu 2021- Santander 2022
- Spokane 2023