Hiroe Yuki
Hiroe Yuki (湯木 博恵, Yuki Hiroe) (15 November 1948 – 7 September 2011 in Tokyo) was a Japanese badminton player. She won numerous major international titles from the late 1960s to the late 1970s.[1]
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Women's badminton | ||
Representing Japan | ||
World Championships | ||
1977 Malmö | Women's singles | |
World Cup | ||
1979 Tokyo | Women's singles | |
Uber Cup | ||
1966 Wellington | Women's team | |
1969 Tokyo | Women's team | |
1972 Tokyo | Women's team | |
1975 Jakarta | Women's team | |
1978 Auckland | Women's team | |
1981 Tokyo | Women's team | |
Asian Games | ||
1970 Bangkok | Women's singles | |
1970 Bangkok | Women's team | |
1974 Tehran | Women's singles | |
1974 Tehran | Women's team | |
1978 Bangkok | Women's team |
Career
Yuki was among the most notable of a cadre of fine players who helped Japan to win five of the six Uber Cup (women's world team) competitions held between 1966 and 1981.[2] With the possible exception of Etsuko Toganoo she was Japan's most successful ever player at the prestigious All-England Championships winning four singles titles (1969, 1974, 1975, 1977) there, as well as a doubles title (1971) in partnership with her friendly rival Noriko Takagi.[3] At the 1972 Olympics, she won a bronze medal in Women's singles, when badminton was played as a demonstration sport. In the latter part of her career she earned a women's singles bronze medal at the first IBF World Championships in 1977. Yuki overcame an Achilles tendon rupture early in her career to compile her impressive record.[4]
Personal
In 1986, she married Kenji Niinuma, a Japanese popular enka singer, and together they later had two children, a son and a daughter. In 2002, Yuki was inducted into the World Badminton Hall of Fame.
References
- "HIROE YUKI". bwfmuseum.isida.pro. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
- Pat Davis, The Guinness Book of Badminton (Enfield, Middlesex, England: Guinness Superlative Ltd., 1983) 133-136.
- Pat Davis, Guinness Book of Badminton (Enfield, Middlesex, England: Guinness Superlatives Ltd. 1983), pp. 106, 108.
- Herbert Scheele ed., The International Badminton Federation Handbook for 1971 (Canterbury, Kent, England: J.A. Jennings Ltd., 1971), pg. 220