Sports & Fitness

Japan Open: Nishimoto, Yamaguchi take honours, delighting home crowd

Former ends six-final losing streak to win first title, beating Taiwan’s Chou Tien-chen 21-19, 21-23, 21-17

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 04 Sep 2022 7:23PM

Japan Open: Nishimoto, Yamaguchi take honours, delighting home crowd
Japan’s Kenta Nishimoto hits a return against Taiwan’s Chou Tien-chen during the men’s singles final of the Japan Open badminton tournament in Osaka today. The 28-year-old Nishimoto says he is ‘really happy and also a bit relieved’ after landing his first title. – AFP pic, September 4, 2022

OSAKA – Home favourites Kenta Nishimoto and Akane Yamaguchi thrilled the crowd at badminton’s Japan Open in Osaka today, winning the men’s and women’s singles titles for the host country.

World No. 21 Nishimoto stunned Taiwan’s No. 4 seed Chou Tien-chen 21-19, 21-23, 21-17 to finally claim his first international title, having lost in his previous six final appearances.

Nishimoto’s win gave the home crowd something to cheer after Japan’s number two seed Kento Momota lost in the first round earlier in the week.

The 28-year-old Nishimoto said he was “really happy and also a bit relieved” after landing his first title.

“I was very worried going into the third game,” said Nishimoto.

“He’s a veteran player with a lot of skill who knows how to play cleverly, so I had to be careful right until the end.”

Chou, who reached the semi-finals of last week’s BWF World Championships in Tokyo, is known as badminton’s comeback king but he could not find a way past Nishimoto in the third game.

“I just tried to keep pushing,” said Chou.

“It worked in the second set but in the third set I made some mistakes and it was difficult to move closer.”

Yamaguchi gave Japan another gold medal to celebrate when she beat South Korea’s An Se-young 21-9, 21-15 in the women’s final.

Yamaguchi retained her world title last week in Tokyo and she still had enough left in the tank to win her third tournament of the year.

“Me and my opponent were both really tired so I wanted to take control of the game right from the start,” said the 25-year-old world No. 1.

“I had to take it to the limit, and when I hit that limit, I had the crowd to push me forward.”

In the women’s doubles, South Korea’s Jeong Na-eun and Kim Hye-jeong beat their compatriots Baek Ha-na and Lee Yu-lim 23-21, 28-26 to win the title.

Chinese pair Liang Weikeng and Wang Chan took the honours in the men’s doubles, beating Denmark’s Kim Astrup and Anders Skaarup Rasmussen 21-18, 13-21, 21-17.

In the mixed doubles, Thailand’s Dechapol Puavaranukroh and Sapsiree Taerattanachai beat Japan’s Yuta Watanabe and Arisa Higashino 16-21, 23-21, 21-18. – AFP, September 4, 2022

Related News

Malaysia / 4w

PM Anwar instructs MetMalaysia to expedite cloud seeding in Kedah, Perlis

Sports & Fitness / 1mth

Thomas Cup: A boost for Zii Jia despite Malaysia losing to Japan

Sports & Fitness / 1mth

Thomas Cup 2026: Japan defeat Malaysia 3-2 to top Group B

Off beat / 1mth

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

Sports & Fitness / 1mth

Thomas Cup: Malaysia, Japan play mind games ahead of Group B decider

Sports & Fitness / 1mth

Uber Cup: Contrasting emotions for Thinaah as Malaysia head to quarterfinals

Spotlight

Malaysia

Former head of a ministry's corporate communications unit acquitted of bribery charge

Malaysia

Two sisters die trapped in Johor house fire as escape routes cut off by flames

Malaysia

NS election speculation intensifies as Aminuddin granted audience with state ruler

Malaysia

Teenager who drove recklessly, causing death remanded for further investigation

Malaysia

Police looking for trio involved in violent armed robbery in Penang (video)

Malaysia

Family of five killed as car crashes into water pipe in Serian

Malaysia

'I was once spat on by a pakcik' — Marina denies fear of contesting Malay-majority seats

Malaysia

Jewellery shop among six premises destroyed in fire (video)