Despite the absence of its defending Women’s Singles champion, Wang
Yihan, the OSIM BWF World Superseries Finals will not be devoid of
quality.
Though injury has thwarted the world No. 1 and Chinese shuttler’s quest
for a second straight year-end success, eight of the best have
confirmed their participation and it is difficult to predict the winner.![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_tr1UWgm11P1Cu7VKXvP75fs3KQoczk8kpsntljHY6qzQBQ0OTnj5z4kXkaP_03kCH1sVYKIXwNn1NrSE9noyca1xp4-KgqAwt9gW0fKFUFE-7WOB4U-f0=s0-d)
The favourite must be Olympic gold medallist, Li Xuerui (BWF home page),
who has enjoyed an astonishing season – winning seven major individual
titles. Amazingly, Li has won 51 of 56 matches this year – triumphing
more than 90 per cent of the time!
In a relatively short career, she has won most of the major titles –
the Olympics, the Asian Championships and the All England, and she will
be keen to add the World Superseries Finals to that list.
Saina Nehwal had a slow start to the year, but she had a dream fortnight in June, sweeping the Thailand Open and Indonesia
Open Superseries. At the Indonesia Open she had brilliant victories
over third seed Wang Shixian in the quarters, Sung Ji Hyun (Korea,
semi-finals), and Li Xuerui in the final. Following a successful
campaign at the Olympics, where she won a bronze medal, the 22-year-old
had another remarkable two weeks in Europe, winning the Denmark Open
Superseries Premier and finishing runner-up in the French Open. Boasting
victories over all the top Chinese, Nehwal stands a good chance of
finishing 2012 on a high.
The second Chinese in the fray is
world No. 5 Wang Shixian, who has not had a good season by her high
standards. Although she had a great start to the year – winning the
Korea Open and reaching the final of the Swiss – her confidence seemed
to desert her after she lost a thrilling quarter-final to Nehwal at the
Indonesia Open. She frequently lost in early rounds to lower-ranked
players, such as Xuan Deng (China, No. 107), Minatsu Mitani (Japan, No.
13), Eriko Hirose (Japan, No. 14), and Porntip Buranaprasertsuk
(Thailand, No. 12). However, Wang has won major titles and she is
capable of coming back in strong fashion; the World Superseries Finals
could be the ideal stage.
Tine Baun (bottom right) is in the final leg of a great career. She is definitely not at her best, and her 2012 season reflects
that:
the only title she won was the European Championships. In all the other
tournaments, she failed to get past the quarter-finals. However, it
would be foolhardy of the others to underestimate this great Dane, as
she is certainly capable of springing a few surprises.
The other three contenders are Sung
Ji Hyun (Korea, No. 8), Eriko Hirose (Japan, No. 14) and Ratchanok
Intanon (Thailand, No. 9). Sung Ji Hyun (top left)
was consistent through the year, with a couple of big upsets (China’s
Wang Xin and Jiang Yanjiao), but she has no title to show. Hirose, the
27-year-old, continued to fight despite the march of much-younger
opponents. She was narrowly beaten to the Japan Open title by teenager
Tai Tzu Ying (Chinese Taipei), and made the semi-finals of the French
Open after upsetting second seed Wang Shixian.
Ratchanok Intanon (bottom left) had her
moments in the year but found it hard to go all the way. Nevertheless,
she had some significant wins and the 17-year-old has progressed well.
Whether the Thai prodigy can challenge for honours at the World
Superseries Finals is another question altogether
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