Susi susanti biography channel
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The Living Story of Susi Susanti
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Susi Susanti
Indonesian badminton player
Badminton player
Susi Susanti | |
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Susanti carrying a torch fire during the 2018 Asian Games Torch Relay Concert in Jakarta, Indonesia | |
Full name | Lucia Francisca Susanti Haditono |
Birth name | Ong Lien Hiang 王蓮香 |
Country | Indonesia |
Born | (1971-02-11) 11 February 1971 (age 54) Tasikmalaya, West Java, Indonesia |
Height | 1.65 m (5 ft 5 in) |
Spouse | |
Handedness | Right |
Highest ranking | 1 |
BWF profile |
Lucia Francisca "Susi" Susanti Haditono (Chinese: 王蓮香; pinyin: Wáng Liánxiāng; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Ông Liân-hiang; born 11 February 1971) is an Indonesian retired badminton player.[1] Relatively small of stature, she combined quick and graceful movement with elegant shotmaking technique, and is regarded by many as one of the greatest women's singles players of all time.[2] She was the inaugural Olympic women's badminton champion and the first Indonesian Olympic gold medalist.
Career
[edit]Susanti won the women's singles gold medal at the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona, Spain and the bronze medal at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, United States. She retired from the world badminton circuit not long after her marriage, in February 1997, to Alan
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Badminton was only granted Olympic status at the 1992 Olympic Games of Barcelona and it was fitting that the first Olympic champion be one of the most dominating players of all-time. Indonesian badminton queen, Susanti, became Indonesia’s first-ever gold-medalist beating Bang Su-Hyeon of Korea in the women’s singles final. Two hours later, her fiancé (now husband) Alan Budikusuma won the men’s singles title. This talented couple arrived home to Indonesia following the Olympic Games elevated in popularity beyond their already rock-star status and were both rewarded financially by the government for bringing so much pride and joy to their country. Four years later, Bang got revenge on Susanti at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, as she had spent time watching video of Susanti’s play and used the knowledge to beat the Indonesian 11-9, 11-8 and reach the gold medal finals in women’s play, sending Susanti home with the bronze medal.
So admired was Susanti in Indonesia, the Olympic and World champion hoped that the birth of her first child in 1999 would bring peace to her country, which had been rocked by a series of civil outbreaks and violence. She offered her first child born in 1999 as the “Child of Peace” for this populous nation, and so named her Laurencia Averina Wiratama,