Nina Vislova

Nina Vislova
Personal information
Country  Russia
Born (1986-10-04) October 4, 1986
Moscow, Russia
BWF profile

Nina Vislova (born October 4, 1986) is a badminton player from Russia. Along with her doubles partner Valeria Sorokina, Vislova is the first Russian Olympic medalist in badminton.[1]

Career

Vislova won four medals at the European Junior Badminton Championships: two gold medals in women's doubles (2003 and 2005), a silver medal in mixed doubles (2003), and a bronze medal also in mixed doubles (2005). Nina also won at the 2006 US Open [2] in women's and mixed doubles. She won the gold medal at the 2010 European Badminton Championships and bronze medals in 2008 and 2012 in women's doubles with Valeria Sorokina.[3] In Russia, her home country, she has won eight national titles as of 2014.

2012 Summer Olympics

She played in women's doubles discipline with Valeria Sorokina and finished in third place after winning bronze medal match against Canadian women's doubles players, Bruce and Li with 21-9, 21-10.

Round Partner Opponent Result Score
Group Stage Valeria Sorokina China Wang Xiaoli
China Yu Yang
Win (opponent disqualified) -
Group Stage Valeria Sorokina South Korea Jung Kyung-eun
South Korea Kim Ha-na
Win (opponent disqualified) -
Group Stage Valeria Sorokina Canada Bruce
Canada Li
Win 21-8, 21-10
Quarterfinal Valeria Sorokina South Africa Michelle Edwards
South Africa Annari Viljoen
Win 21-9, 21-7
Semifinal Valeria Sorokina China Tian Qing
China Zhao Yunlei
Lost 19-21, 6-21
Bronze Medal Match Valeria Sorokina Canada Bruce
Canada Li
Win 21-9, 21-10

Achievements

Women's Doubles with Valeria Sorokina

Year Tournament Venue Round
2012
Russian Open Grand Prix Russia Winner
U.S. Open Grand Prix Gold United States Runner-Up
2011
Russian Open Grand Prix Russia Winner
Dutch International Challenge Netherlands Winner
White Nights Russia Winner
Italian International Challenge Italy Winner
Czech International Challenge Czech Republic Winner
2010
Russian Open Grand Prix Russia Winner
Dutch Open Grand Prix Netherlands Winner
2009
Scottish Open Scotland Winner
Dutch Open Grand Prix Netherlands Winner
Russian Open Grand Prix Russia Winner
Welsh International Series Wales Winner
White Nights Russia Winner
Le Volant d'Or de Toulouse France Winner
2008
Russian Open Grand Prix Russia Winner
2007
Dutch Open Grand Prix Netherlands Runner-Up
Scottish Open Scotland Winner
2006
U.S. Open United States Winner
2005
Scottish Open Scotland Winner
Russian Open Russia Winner

Women's Doubles with Anastasia Chervyakova

Year Tournament Venue Round
2014
Polish International Challenge Poland Winner
Estonian International Series Estonia Winner
2013
Swiss International Challenge Switzerland Winner
Russian Open Grand Prix Russia Winner

Mixed Doubles with Vitaliy Durkin

Year Tournament Venue Round
2014
Polish International Challenge Poland Winner
Estonian International Series Estonia Winner
2013
Russian Open Grand Prix Russia Runner-Up
Swiss International Challenge Switzerland Winner
Welsh International Challenge Wales Runner-Up
2012
Russian Open Grand Prix Russia Runner-Up
2011
Vietnam Open Grand Prix Vietnam Winner
Italian International Challenge Italy Runner-Up
Swiss International Challenge Switzerland Winner
2010
Russian Open Grand Prix Russia Runner-Up
2009
Russian Open Grand Prix Russia Winner
Dutch Open Grand Prix Netherlands Runner-Up
Welsh International Series Wales Winner
White Nights Russia Runner-Up
2008
Russian Open Grand Prix Russia Runner-Up

Mixed Doubles with Sergey Ivlev

Year Tournament Venue Round
2006
U.S. Open United States Winner

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.