Sports & Fitness

Paralympics: Liek Hou upsets top seed to win badminton gold

Malaysian creates history by becoming the first men’s singles champion

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 04 Sep 2021 4:24PM

Paralympics: Liek Hou upsets top seed to win badminton gold
Cheah Liek Hou celebrates his victory after beating Indonesia's Dheva Anrimusthi in the men's singles SU5 (physical impairment) category final in the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games today. - Bernama pic, September 4, 2021

TOKYO -  Six-time world champion Cheah Liek Hou made history today when he became the first Paralympic badminton men’s singles champion.

The 33-year-old world number two was in devastating form as he crushed his nemesis and Games favourite Anrimusthi Dheva of Indonesia 21-17, 21-15 in the men’s singles SU5 (physical impairment) final at the Yoyogi National Stadium today.

Badminton is making its debut at the Tokyo Paralympics.

In the first game, world number one Anrimusthi made a series of errors to hand Liek Hou a comfortable 5-0 lead before the Indonesian closed the gap to 5-8.

After taking a commanding lead of 11-5 at the interval, Liek Hou’s performance took a dip, allowing the Indonesian to pull level at 15-15. That woke the national shuttler from his slumber as he regained his composure and with a powerful smash earned the final point to win the first game 21-17.

The second game was a much closer battle, with both shuttlers fighting neck-and-neck before Liek Hou took a slim 11-10 lead at the interval.

This time, Liek Hou was wide awake as he showed great resilience to absorb the Indonesian’s attacks and sealing a 21-15 win to bag the coveted gold medal.

Liek Hou then fell flat on the court savouring the golden moment before getting up and heading straight to his coach Datuk Rashid Sidek to celebrate a stupendous victory.

It also helped Liek Hou stretch his winning streak in Tokyo Paralympics Games to five straight matches, including three wins in Group B.

Earlier today, the 33-year-old staged a great fightback to upset Fang Jen-yu of Chinese Taipei 15-21, 21-10, 21-16 in the semi-finals.

The Kuala Lumpur-born Liek Hou’s win means that Malaysia have now won two gold medals, following powerlifting ace Bonnie Bunyau Gustin’s heroics in the men’s 72-kilogramme event on Aug 28.

The national contingent was set a three-gold target for the Tokyo Paralympics.

Malaysia have also bagged two silver medals, so far, through Bonnie’s team-mate Jong Yee Khie in the 107kg event on Monday (Aug 30) and national boccia player Chew Wei Lun, who lost 4-2 to defending champion David Smith of Great Britain in the mixed individual BC1 (physical impairment) category on Wednesday (Sept 1).

Meanwhile, Jen-yu’s hopes of a bronze medal were dashed when he lost 16-21, 9-21 to Indonesian Suryo Nugroho in 41 minutes. - Bernama, September 4, 2021

Related News

Off beat / 1mth

Malaysia unveils world’s first AI-powered review system for badminton

Sports & Fitness / 10mth

Consistency matters more than world ranking – Thinaah

Sports & Fitness / 1y

Chong Wei: Thank you, coach Pak Hendrawan!

Sports & Fitness / 1y

Tang Jie-Ee Wei give Malaysia late birthday gift with Korean Open win

Sports & Fitness / 1y

More rewards possible for Aaron-Wooi Yik over Paris Olympics bronze

Sports & Fitness / 1y

Don’t be keyboard warriors over Paris 2024 performance, says Chong Wei

Spotlight

Malaysia

Anwar congratulates Modi on becoming India's longest-serving elected PM

Malaysia

Missing jewellery: Rosmah ordered to pay RM67.5 million

People

Malay kampongs in Bangkok: Echoes of southern heritage in Thailand’s capital

Opinion

Johor MB’s exclusionary rhetoric betrays the people, exposes UMNO’s political hypocrisy

Malaysia

Johor and NS polls first major test of post PAS-Bersatu political order

Malaysia

Claimed installation of 12th N. Sembilan ruler invalid - Pengelola Bijaya Diraja

Malaysia

4WD driver who drove backwards on highway nabbed, positive for drugs (video)

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Seven in ten Malaysian workers earn RM5k or less - economist

You may be interested

Sports & Fitness

World Cup kicks off under cloud of controversy as football's global showpiece returns