South Korean badminton player
Badminton player
Kim Jae-hwan |
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Country | South Korea |
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Born | (1996-08-13) 13 August 1996 (age 28) Jeongeup, North Jeolla Province, South Korea |
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Residence | Iksan, Jeollabuk-do, South Korea |
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Height | 1.79 m (5 ft 10 in) |
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Handedness | Right |
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Highest ranking | 38 (MD 18 February 2020) 46 (XD 16 November 2017) |
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Current ranking | 48 (MD 22 February 2022) |
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BWF profile |
Kim Jae-hwan (Korean: 김재환; born 13 August 1996) is a South Korean badminton player.[1] He graduated from the Jeonju Life Science High School, and now educated at the Wonkwang University.[2] In his junior career, he had collected a gold and two bronzes at the World Junior Championships, and also three silvers and a bronze at the Asian Junior Championships. In 2016, he won the men's doubles title with his partnered Choi Sol-gyu at the World University Championships in Russia.[3] At the same year, he won the BWF Grand Prix Gold tournament at the Korea Masters in the men's doubles event with Ko Sung-hyun.[4] In 2017, he competed at the Taipei Summer Universiade and won the men's doubles gold together with Seo Seung-jae.[5]
Achievements
Summer Universiade
Men's doubles
World University Championships
Men's doubles
BWF World Junior Championships
Boys' doubles
Asian Junior Championships
Boys' doubles
Mixed doubles
BWF Grand Prix (1 title)
The BWF Grand Prix had two levels, the Grand Prix and Grand Prix Gold. It was a series of badminton tournaments sanctioned by the Badminton World Federation (BWF) and played between 2007 and 2017.
Men's doubles
- BWF Grand Prix Gold tournament
- BWF Grand Prix tournament
BWF International Challenge/Series (2 titles, 4 runners-up)
Men's doubles
Year
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Tournament
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Partner
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Opponent
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Score
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Result
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2019
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Osaka International
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Kang Min-hyuk
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Ko Sung-hyun Shin Baek-cheol
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13–21, 16–21
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Runner-up
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2019
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Vietnam International
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Kang Min-hyuk
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Kenas Adi Haryanto Rian Agung Saputro
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19–21, 21–15, 18–21
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Runner-up
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2019
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Mongolia International
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Kang Min-hyuk
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Kim Won-ho Park Kyung-hoon
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21–14, 27–29, 14–21
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Runner-up
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2019
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Indonesia International
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Kang Min-hyuk
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Muhammad Fachrikar Amri Syahnawi
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21–17, 11–21, 21–15
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Winner
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2022
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Italian International
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Yoon Dae-il
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Su Ching-heng Ye Hong-wei
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21–14, 21–19
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Winner
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2023
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Indonesia International
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Ki Dong-ju
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Kenya Mitsuhashi Hiroki Okamura
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22–20, 16–21, 8–21
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Runner-up
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- BWF International Challenge tournament
- BWF International Series tournament
References
External links