Defending champion Lin Dan will be the only big name missing from Men’s
Singles in the year-ending OSIM BWF World Superseries Finals that get
underway in Shenzhen on 12 December.
Lin,
the World and Olympic champion from China, has played in only three
Superseries events in 2012 – the Korea Open, Malaysia Open and All
England – and is placed a lowly No. 29 in the World Superseries
standings.
Barring big upsets, the Men’s
Singles should be a fight between No. 1 Lee Chong Wei (Malaysia) and No.
2 Chen Long (China). The two (together, BWF home page)
have met 12 times in their career, and Lee holds a slim advantage with a
7-5 record. He has had an outstanding season so far –reaching the final
of all nine open tournaments he has taken part in, winning five. It
will be interesting to see if he can make a tenth straight final.
“It has been hectic year, especially with my wedding and all,” Lee was
quoted as saying by The Star newspaper. “I only had two days of solid
training after my marriage for the Hong Kong Open but I still made it to
the final. Physically, I can still press on but, mentally, I am quite
drained. Anyway, I will go all out in my final tournament for this
season at the World Superseries Finals and try to keep my record clean.”
However, the Men’s Singles event will not be only about Lee Chong Wei and Chen Long. The feisty Du Pengyu (top left)
of China will hope to go all the way to a title after failing thrice in
finals this year – at the Asian Championships, Indonesia Open and
Denmark Open. Pengyu can be a difficult player to beat for the best
players if he gets into rhythm, as he demonstrated in the exciting
Denmark Open final, where Lee just got past him.
There is also Daren Liew, who surprised everybody by winning the French
Open Superseries; a strong performance in Shenzhen will help this
Malaysian prove that the Superseries victory was no fluke.
Kenichi Tago (bottom left)
had a wretched mid-season after beginning the year promisingly. He
reached the final of the Malaysia Open and semi-finals at the All
England but, half-way through the year, he lost in the first or second
rounds of five straight tournaments. However, he seemed to recover his
confidence at the French Open, where he made the semi-finals. The
Japanese player admitted in Hong Kong that there is still a gulf between
him and the top players. Whether he can reduce this chasm in Shenzhen
is left to be seen.
The other three in the draw have not been consistent. Hong Kong’s Hu
Yun enjoyed a good run of form in the middle of 2012, reaching the
semi-finals of the Indonesia Open and Japan Open, and final of the China
Masters, but the latter half of the year has seen him lose in the early
rounds. Thailand veteran Boonsak Ponsana (top right) also struggled, but a win at the Singapore Open Superseries and the runner-up place in Japan helped him salvage 2012.
The lucky qualifier in the Men’s Singles was Denmark’s Hans-Kristian Vittinghus (bottom right)
who benefitted from the withdrawal of Japan’s Sho Sasaki. The Dane has
dropped to a world ranking of 24 from his career-best 14, and has had an
average year, with his best performances coming at the German Open and
Swiss Open (quarter-final losses to Lin Dan and Chen Long respectively).
Vittinghus will back himself to spring some surprises at the
Superseries Finals.
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