Facts About Badminton
Facts About Badminton
Facts About Badminton
- The official game of Badminton was born in a stately home in Gloucestershire, England,
home of the Duke of Beaufort.
- Badminton is the Fastest Racket Sport with shuttle clocking speed in excess of 200 mph.
- The best shuttlecocks are made from the feathers from the left wing of a goose.
- The International Badminton Federation (IBF) was founded in 1934 with nine members and
now has over 150 members.
- The IBF is now headquartered in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
- Badminton was introduced into USA in the 1890s and became popular in the 1930s.
- Badminton is the second most popular sport in the world, after soccer.
- Badminton is an Olympic Sport played first in the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona.
- More than 1.1 billion people watched the 1992 Olympic Badminton competition on
television.
- Only 3 countries have won the Thomas Cup since it's inception in 1948: Malaysia,
Indonesia and China.
- Only 4 countries have won the Uber Cup since its inception in 1956: USA, Japan, China
and Indonesia.
Badminton Facts
Badminton claims to be the second most-popular participation sport in the world. Only Soccer beats it.
It's officially the fastest racquet sport in the world. The shuttle is smashed around the court at speeds of up to 200 mph.
Its Olympic debut was in 1992 in Barcelona. Since 1992 Asian players have won 42 of the 46 Olympic medals.
During an average top-level match ten shuttles are used with players hitting it roughly 400 times each. It's a tiring business - they
can travel several miles around the court
The record for the shortest match? Six minutes. Ra Kyung-min (South Korea) and Julia Mann (England) hold the record. Peter
Rasmussen (Denmark) and Sun Jun (China) hold the record for the longest match - 124 minutes.
In Malaysia and Indonesia crowds of up to 15,000 people regularly fill the stands to cheer on their heroes.
The International Badminton Federation was established in 1934 and now has 148 member countries including England, Ireland,
Scotland and Wales.
Celebrity fans include snooker player Mark Williams and golfers Padraig Harrington and Nick Faldo. You can even buy Barbie a
racquet and shuttles.
The Chinese originally played a version of badminton called Ti Zian Ji. They didn't use racquets though, they used their feet.
The Duke of Beaufort held parties at his estate, Badminton House in 1873. His guests were invited to play a game with
shuttlecocks - and so the official game of badminton was born.
The origin of the shuttlecock is a bit hazy. One theory is that writing feathers were stuck in corks when they weren't used. During
quiet moments the 'pen' store would be thrown, or whacked, around.
Olympic shuttles are made of 16 bird feathers, string and very strong glue. The Kansas City Museum is home to the world's largest
shuttlecock - 48 times bigger than normal.
While most players choose synthetic strings, some still use gut made from the dried stomach lining of animals such as cows or
cats.