2012 BWF Super Series
The 2012 BWF Super Series is the sixth season of the BWF Super Series.[1] The season started with a Super Series Premier event in Korea and ended in Hong Kong. The season-ending Masters Finals were held in Shenzhen, China from December 12–16, 2012.
Schedule
Below is the schedule released by Badminton World Federation:[2]
Tour |
Official title |
Venue |
City |
Date |
Prize money USD |
Report |
Start |
Finish |
1 |
Korea Open Super Series Premier |
SK Olympic Handball Gymnasium |
Seoul |
January 3 |
January 8 |
1,000,000 |
Report |
2 |
Malaysia Open Super Series |
Putra Indoor Stadium |
Kuala Lumpur |
January 10 |
January 15 |
400,000 |
Report |
3 |
All England Super Series Premier |
National Indoor Arena |
Birmingham |
March 6 |
March 11 |
350,000 |
Report |
4 |
India Super Series |
Siri Fort Indoor Stadium |
New Delhi |
April 24 |
April 29 |
200,000 |
Report |
5 |
Indonesia Super Series Premier |
Gelora Bung Karno Stadium |
Jakarta |
June 12 |
June 17 |
650,000 |
Report |
6 |
Singapore Super Series |
Singapore Indoor Stadium |
Singapore |
June 19 |
June 24 |
200,000 |
Report |
7 |
China Masters Super Series |
Xincheng Gymnasium |
Changzhou |
September 11 |
September 16 |
250,000 |
Report |
8 |
Japan Super Series |
Yoyogi National Gymnasium |
Tokyo |
September 18 |
September 23 |
200,000 |
Report |
9 |
Denmark Super Series Premier |
Odense Sports Park |
Odense |
October 16 |
October 21 |
400,000 |
Report |
10 |
French Super Series |
Stade Pierre de Coubertin |
Paris |
October 23 |
October 28 |
200,000 |
Report |
11 |
China Open Super Series Premier |
Yuanshen Sports Center Stadium |
Shanghai |
November 13 |
November 18 |
350,000 |
Report |
12 |
Hong Kong Super Series |
Hong Kong Coliseum |
Kowloon |
November 20 |
November 25 |
250,000 |
Report |
13 |
Super Series Masters Finals |
Shenzhen Bay Sports Center |
Shenzhen |
December 12 |
December 16 |
500,000 |
Report |
Super Series Premier
Results
Winners
Performance by countries
Tabulated below are the Super Series performances based on countries. Only countries who have won a title are listed:
Finals
Korea
Malaysia
All England
India
Indonesia
Category |
Winners |
Runners-up |
Score |
Men's singles |
Simon Santoso |
Du Pengyu |
21–18, 13–21, 21–11 |
Women's singles |
Saina Nehwal |
Li Xuerui |
13–21, 22–20, 21–19 |
Men's doubles |
Jung Jae-sung / Lee Yong-dae |
Mathias Boe / Carsten Mogensen |
23–21, 19–21, 21–11 |
Women's doubles |
Wang Xiaoli / Yu Yang |
Zhao Yunlei / Tian Qing |
17–21, 21–9, 21–16 |
Mixed doubles |
Sudket Prapakamol / Saralee Thungthongkam |
Tontowi Ahmad / Lilyana Natsir |
21–17, 17–21, 21–13 |
Singapore
China Masters
Japan
Denmark
France
China Open
Hong Kong
Masters Finals
References
|
---|
|
|
|
Italics denotes Premier event |