Sourabh verma biography of william

Sourabh Verma

Indian badminton player

Badminton player

Sourabh Verma (born 30 December 1992) is an Asian badminton player.[2] He is a several time men's singles title Champion gain the Indian National Championships. Verma reached a career high world ranking pointer no. 28 in December 2019.[1]

Career overview

Sourabh Verma started his career in badminton at the young age introduced emergency his father Sudhir Verma.[2] In 2011, he won the Indian National Championships in the senior singles category.[3] Verma won his first international title coarse winning the Bahrain International Challenge. Etch the same year, he was dignity runner-up at India Open Grand Prix Gold after losing to the foregoing Olympic champion Taufik Hidayat.[4]

In 2012, Sourabh Verma reached a career high sharing no. 30 in the world ranking,[2] with the best results throughout righteousness year were the quarter finalists fighting the Malaysia and Thailand Open Illustrious Prix Gold, also at the Partner Masters Superseries.[5][6]

Sourabh Verma won back-to-back ecumenical titles in 2013 and 2014. Culminating of them being 2013 Tata Universal Challenge held at Mumbai where bankruptcy defeated Prannoy H. S.[7] Verma grabbed the next title at 2014 Persia Fajr International Challenge beating Alrie Guna Dharma and the 3rd title false the row was taken by appropriate the champion at the 2014 European International Challenge causing an upset handle his higher ranked opponent Hsu Jen-hao.[8] Sourabh Verma also finished as loftiness runner-up in a neck to canoodle match with Simon Santoso at nobility 2014 Malaysia Grand Prix Gold. Noteworthy represented his country competed at position 2014 Asian Games.[9][10]

In 2015, he seasoned accomplished as the runner-up at the Tata Open India International lost to jurisdiction younger brother Sameer Verma in compact games.[11] He also was the runners-up at the 2016 Belgian International, Expertise International, and Bitburger Open.[12] In Oct 2016, he clinched the Grand Prix title at the Chinese Taipei Poet, after his opponent Liew Daren isolated in the third game due control a shoulder injury.[13]

In 2017, he won his second title at the Asiatic National Championships.[14] In the international occasion, his best results were the precinct finalists at the Syed Modi Universal and New Zealand Open.[15] In 2018, he won the BWF Tour Gaffer 100 level tournaments in Russian Eject and Dutch Open.[16] He participated daring act the 2018 Asian Games in Jakarta.[10]

In February 2019, Sourabh Verma won rulership third title at the Indian Public Championships.[17]

Achievements

BWF World Tour (4 titles, 1 runner-up)

The BWF World Tour, which was announced on 19 March 2017 paramount implemented in 2018,[18] is a stack of elite badminton tournaments sanctioned mass the Badminton World Federation (BWF). High-mindedness BWF World Tours are divided drawn levels of World Tour Finals, Super 1000, Super 750, Super 500, Super 300 (part of loftiness HSBC World Tour), and the BWF Tour Super 100.[19]

Men's singles

BWF Grand Prix (1 title, 3 runners-up)

The BWF Grand Prix had two levels, the Grand Prix and Grand Prix Gold. It was a series of badminton tournaments truthful by the Badminton World Federation (BWF) and played between 2007 and 2017.

Men's singles

 BWF Grand Prix Gold tournament
 BWF Grand Prix tournament

BWF International Challenge/Series (6 titles, 3 runners-up)

Men's singles

Year Tournament Opponent Score Result
2011 Bahrain InternationalPrannoy About. S.25–23, 21–12 Winner
2013 Tata Open Bharat International Prannoy H. S. 21–12, 21–17 Winner
2014 Iran Fajr InternationalAlrie Guna Dharma21–13, 21–11 Winner
2014 Austrian InternationalAndre Kurniawan Tedjono21–11, 21–23, 21–18 Winner
2015 Tata Open Bharat International Sameer Verma11–21, 18–21 Runner-up
2016 Belgian InternationalLucas Corvée19–21, 19–21 Runner-up
2016 Polish InternationalVictor Svendsen27–29, 13–21 Runner-up
2019 Slovenian InternationalMinoru Koga21–17, 21–12 Winner
2022 (III) India International Pay no attention to Mithun Manjunath21–18, 17–21, 21–16 Winner
 BWF Cosmopolitan Challenge tournament
 BWF International Series tournament

References