Israel Open (badminton)

(Redirected from Hatzor International)

The Israel Open, formerly called Hatzor International, in badminton is an international open held in Israel since 1975. It was held annually from 1975 to 1982, but between 1983 and 2005 the competition was held only thrice. The competition was resumed in 2006 under a new name Hatzor International, after the club which host the event at Kibbutz Hatzor. Israeli National Badminton Championships started in 1977.

Previous winners edit

Year Men's singles Women's singles Men's doubles Women's doubles Mixed doubles
1975   Victor Yusim No competition   Victor Yusim
  Michael Schneidman
No competition
1976   Michael Schneidman   Tineke Hof   Tineke Hof
  Devora Geffen
No competition
1977   Victor Yusim   Eva Unglick   Eva Unglick
  Chaya Grunstein
1978   Chaya Grunstein   Chaya Grunstein
  Carole Silman
  Michael Rapaport
  Carole Silman
1979   Eva Unglick   Eva Unglick
  Chaya Grunstein
  Nissim Duk
  Eva Unglick
1980   Yitzhak Serrouya   Elka Kalb   Nissim Duk
  Yitzhak Serrouya
  Elka Kalb
  Irit Ben Shushan
  Michael Rapaport
  Eva Unglick
1981   Johann Ratheyser   Adelhid Losek   Johann Rathyser
  Gerard Hofegger
  Eva Unglick
  Irit Ben Shushan
  Johann Ratheyser
  Adelheid Losek
1982   Andrew Downes   Lisa Salmon   David Spurling
  Stuart Spurling
  Lisa Salmon
  J. Downes
  David Spurling
  H. Blake
1983–
1989
No competition
1990   Stephane Renault   Christelle Mol   Ricardo Fernandes
  Marco Vasconcelos
  Christelle Mol
  Virginie Delvingt
  Stephane Renault
  Elodie Mansuy
1991–
1997
No competition
1998[1]   Aivaras Kvedarauskas   Svetlana Zilberman   Aivaras Kvedarauskas
  Nir Yusim
  Svetlana Zilberman
  Diana Koleva
  Leon Pugatch
  Svetlana Zilberman
1999[2]   Boris Kessov   Neli Boteva   Boris Kessov
  Georgi Petrov
No competition   Ljuben Panov
  Diana Koleva
2000–
2005
No competition
2006   Petr Koukal   Maja Tvrdy   Luka Petric
  Mateuz Srekl
No competition   Luka Petric
  Maja Tvrdy
2007[3]   Sho Sasaki   Tracey Hallam   Jochen Cassel
  Thomas Tesche
  Valeriy Atrashenkov
  Elena Prus
2008–
2012
No competition
2013[4]   Vladimir Malkov   Telma Santos   Vladimir Malkov
  Vadim Novoselov
  Olga Golovanova
  Viktoriia Vorobeva
  Vladimir Malkov
  Viktoriia Vorobeva
2014[5]   Artem Pochtarev   Gennadiy Natarov
  Artem Pochtarev
No competition   Gennadiy Natarov
  Yuliya Kazarinova
2015[6]   Sam Parsons   Zuzana Pavelkova   Alexander Bass
  Daniel Chislov
  Alina Pugach
  Yuval Pugach
  Ariel Shainski
  Krestina Silich
2016[7]   Lukas Zevl   Ana Marija Setina   Yonathan Levit
  Ariel Shainski
  Irina Shorokhova
  Kristina Virvich
2017[8]   Miha Ivanič   Anastasiia Semenova   Alexander Bass
  Shai Geffen
  Ksenia Evgenova
  Anastasiia Semenova
  Yonathan Levit
  Yulia Vasilyeva
2018[9]   Kaushal Dharmamer   Ksenia Polikarpova   Ariel Shainski
  Lukas Zevl
  Ksenia Polikarpova
  Krestina Silich
  Mykhaylo Makhnovskiy
  Anastasiya Prozorova
2019[10]   Felix Hammes   Felix Hammes
  Christopher Klauer
  Heli Neiman
  Ksenia Polikarpova
  May Bar Netzer
  Shery Rotshtein
2020[11] Cancelled[a]
2021[12] Cancelled[b]
2022[13]   Matthias Kicklitz   Dounia Pelupessy   Giovanni Greco
  David Salutt
  Aline Müller
  Caroline Racloz
  Minh Quang Pham
  Caroline Racloz
2023[14] Cancelled[c]
  1. ^ This tournament, originally to be played from 21 to 24 October, was later cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Israel.
  2. ^ This tournament, originally to be played from 27 to 30 October, was later cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Israel.
  3. ^ This tournament, originally to be played on 26–28 October, was later cancelled due to 2023 Israel–Hamas war.[15]

Performances by nation edit

As of the 2022 edition
Rank Nation MS WS MD WD XD Total
1   Israel 6 4 10 6 6.5 32.5
2   Russia 1 1 1 3 1.5 7.5
3   England 2 2 1 1 1 7
4   Germany 2 1 2 0.5 5.5
5   Slovenia 1 2 1 1 5
  Ukraine 1 1 3 5
7   Bulgaria 1 1 1 0.5 1 4.5
8   Austria 1 1 1 1 4
  France 1 1 1 1 4
10   Czech Republic 2 1 0.5 3.5
  Sweden 2 1.5 3.5
12   Portugal 2 1 3
   Switzerland 1 1 1 3
14   Netherlands 1 1 2
15   Belarus 0.5 1 1.5
  Lithuania 1 0.5 1.5
17   India 1 1
  Italy 1 1
  Japan 1 1
Total 21 20 21 16 18 96

References edit

  1. ^ 1998 winners
  2. ^ 1999 winners
  3. ^ 2007 winners
  4. ^ 2013 winners
  5. ^ 2014 winners
  6. ^ 2015 winners
  7. ^ 2016 winners
  8. ^ 2017 winners
  9. ^ 2018 winners
  10. ^ 2019 winners
  11. ^ Israel Open 2020 (Cancelled)
  12. ^ Israel Open 2021(Cancelled)
  13. ^ 2022 winners
  14. ^ YONEX Israel Open 2023 (Cancelled)
  15. ^ "Tournament Cancellation". Badminton World Federation. 11 October 2023. Retrieved 7 November 2023.