Chong Wei’s world title bid begins with a bang

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Lee Chong Wei began the world title bid with a 21-11, 21-12 win over Lee Dong Keun.

Lee Chong Wei began what is almost certainly his best chance of winning the world title with a routine win over Korean opponent Lee Dong Keun in Copenhagen.

The world number one from Malaysia’s 21-11, 21-12 first round win over Lee contained a higher ratio of fast airborne attacks than usual in his superbly well varied game.

It is two months since Chong Wei last competed – a loss to Japan’s Kenichi Tago in Indonesia – but there was no lack of match sharpness and no obvious evidence either of his persistent groin injury.

Despite all this the 31-year-old legend declined to agree that this is the best chance of winning the world title that has somehow eluded him.

“I’ll try my best, that’s all,” he said.

“I can still feel the injury, but today I was very aggressive and I was happy with my performance.”

The spell in which Chong-Wei surged from 3-4 down to 11-4 in the first game was a sequence of the most spectacular and penetrating attack, six of the seven points coming from smashes and the other from a piercing mid-court kill.

It set the tone of the match and made his supporters dream of what might happen this week. With titleholder Lin Dan absent, and both Tago and Simon Santoso of Indonesia, withdrawing, Chong-Wei may never have a better chance.

He was next due to play the winner of Kashyap Parupalli, the former Commonwealth bronze medallist from India, and Dieter Domke, a top 50 German. Good as he may feel, Chong-Wei won’t look beyond that.

He may be wise for two other seeds in his half also played well. Wang Zhengming, the sixth-seeded Chinese player accounted for Michal Rogalski of Poland 21-15,21-12 and could meet Chong-wei in the quarters.

Later Jan Jorgensen, the dangerously improving world number three who should be at his best on home soil, outplayed Maxime Moreels of Belgium 21-15, 21-11.

Two months ago the Dane won his first Super Series title and shortly before that beat Lin Dan, who has six more days as world champion. Jorgensen should meet Chong-Wei in the semis

Earlier Kento Momota, the 20-year-old Japanese player who helped make badminton history at Delhi in May, suffered a dramatic reversal of fortunes when he became the first seeded player to be beaten.

Momota had been a winner in his country’s stunning capture of the Thomas Cup world team title, but was unable to capitalise on a lead of a game and 15-11 against Wei Nan, the Hong Kong player he had beaten in Delhi, losing 18-21, 21-18, 21-12.