Juliane Schenk
Juliane Schenk | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Country | Germany | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Born |
Krefeld, West Germany | 26 November 1982|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.73 m (5 ft 8 in) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Handedness | Right | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Women's singles & doubles | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Highest ranking | 2 (June 2013) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Current ranking | Retired | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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BWF profile |
Juliane Schenk (born 26 November 1982 in Krefeld) is a female badminton player from Germany. In March 2014 she retired from international play.[1]
Career
In 2001 she won the European Junior Championships in women's singles. 2003 saw her win the women's doubles with Nicole Grether in two tournaments; the Irish International and the Bitburg Open.
Schenk played badminton at the 2004 Summer Olympics, losing in women's singles to Tracey Hallam of Great Britain in the round of 32. Besides that she won the German championship in the women's doubles with Nicole for the first time.
She also competed in women's doubles with partner Nicole Grether. They defeated Michelle Edwards and Chantal Botts of South Africa in the first round but were defeated by Ann-Lou Jørgensen and Rikke Olsen of Denmark in the round of 16.
She won the bronze medal at the 2008 European Badminton Championships.[2]
In 2008 Schenk competed in the Beijing Olympics. She narrowly lost her first round match against Indonesian Maria Kristin Yulianti who later succeeded to win the bronze medal.
Schenk nearly reached a bronze medal in the World Championship in Hyderabad in women's singles but lost to French Pi Hongyan in the final set 19:21. It would have been another medal for German women after the shared bronze medals of Xu Huaiwen and Petra Overzier in 2006.
In 2010 European Badminton Championships, Schenk beat 1st seed Pi Hongyan to proceed to the final. She settled for silver after losing to Tine Baun in three sets. In 2012 European Badminton Championships, she lost to Tine Baun again in the final. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she reached the last 16, being beaten by Ratchanok Intanon.
Schenk became independent professional player in June, having severed ties with the German Badminton Association (DBV). Despite being left in a lurch, Schenk showed great determination to reach the Indonesian Open final in June. And she did that with just one training session. In the first inaugural edition of the Indian Badminton League is held from 14 August 2013 to 31 August, Schenk joined Pune Pistons with a reported salary of $90,000.
Juliane Schenk had also signed a contract with the Xiamen Tefang Badminton Club to compete in the 2013-2014 China Badminton Super League. She was beaten by Sun Yu from Guangzhou Huizhou Weihao 11-8 and 11-5, later end of the year beaten by Wang Yihan 12-10,6-11,11-6
Early 2014 in China Badminton Super League, She was beaten by Wang Shixian representing Jiangsu 11-5,11-5. Schenk had announced on her website earlier 2014 that she was intent on getting out of the top ten so that she could avoid paying fines for missing Superseries Premier events. She retired the first round in 2014 Malaysia Super Series Premier against Minatsu Mitani and had a walkover to Zhang Beiwen in 2014 All England Super Series Premier. She told the Rheinische Post that she would be working as a personal trainer, that she was studying at the University of Cologne, and that she was writing a book.
In end of April, she lost to Liu Xin in China Badminton League 7-11, 5-11
Career achievements
Individual titles (9)
Year | Championship | Opponent | Score |
---|---|---|---|
2012 | Bitburger Open | Yao Jie | 21–10, 15–21, 25–23 |
2012 | Singapore Open | Cheng Shao-chieh | 21–11, 26–24 |
2011 | Morocco International | Agnese Allegrini | 21–10, 21–8 |
2009 | Norwegian International | Rachel van Cutsen | 21–12, 19–21, 21–11 |
2009 | Bitburger Open | Yu Hirayama | 21–18, 21–10 |
2009 | Finnish Open | Judith Meulendijks | 21–13, 21–13 |
2009 | Dutch International | Petya Nedelcheva | 21–12, 21–16 |
2009 | Austrian Open | Petya Nedelcheva | 20–22, 21–8, 22–20 |
2008 | Italian International | Larisa Griga | 15–21, 21–13, 21–17 |
Individual runners-up (11)
Year | Championship | Opponent | Score |
---|---|---|---|
2013 | Indonesia Open | Li Xuerui | 16–21, 21–18, 17–21 |
2013 | India Open | Ratchanok Intanon | 20–22, 14–21 |
2013 | German Open | Wang Yihan | 14–21, 13–21 |
2012 | Denmark Open | Saina Nehwal | 17–21, 8–21 |
2012 | India Open | Li Xuerui | 21–14, 17–21, 8–21 |
2012 | European Championships | Tine Baun | 19–21, 21–16, 19–21 |
2012 | German Open | Li Xuerui | 19–21, 16–21 |
2012 | Japan Open | Wang Yihan | 16–21, 14–21 |
2011 | Canada Open | Zhu Lin | 19–21, 21–17, 10–21 |
2010 | German Open | Wang Xin | 17–21, 18–21 |
2010 | European Championships | Tine Rasmussen | 19–21, 21–14, 18–21 |
Record against selected opponents
Includes results from all competitions against Olympic opponents, quarterfinalists, Worlds semifinalists, and Superseries finalists.
- Petya Nedelcheva 9–2
- Gong Ruina 0–3
- Jiang Yanjiao 4–2
- Li Xuerui 1–6
- Liu Xin 2–2
- Lu Lan 0–1
- Wang Lin 2–1
- Wang Shixian 3–6
- Wang Xin 1–3
- Wang Yihan 2–8
- Xie Xingfang 0–4
- Zhang Ning 0–5
- Zhu Lin 0–4
- Cheng Shao-chieh 4–5
- Tai Tzu-ying 3–1
- Kristina Gavnholt 10–0
- Tine Baun 3–8
- Camilla Martin 0–3
- Tracey Hallam 1–2
- Pi Hongyan 4–10
- Xu Huaiwen 1–6
- Wang Chen 0–3
- Yip Pui Yin 5–3
- Zhou Mi 1–3
- Saina Nehwal 4–8
- Lindaweni Fanetri 2–0
- Maria Kristin Yulianti 0–1
- Eriko Hirose 6–4
- Sayaka Sato 2–0
- Minatsu Mitani 0–2
- Bae Youn-joo 8–2
- Sung Ji-hyun 4–3
- Wong Mew Choo 0–1
- Mia Audina 0–2
- Carolina Marín 0–2
- Porntip Buranaprasertsuk 2–1
- Ratchanok Inthanon 3–6
- Larisa Griga 7–0
References
- ↑ Hearn, Don. "Juliane Schenk 'I've already retired'". badzine.net. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
- ↑ "2008 European Championships winners". tournamentsoftware.com. Retrieved 2008-04-21.