In the women's singles final of the 2012 London Olympic Games, the two sides were both national feathers, namely Li Xuerui and Wang Yihan. Snow Girl Paper reached the final as a dark horse and finally defeated kitten to win the championship. In just one year, he crossed from the second team to the Olympic champion.
At the beginning of 2012, she was still a player of the second team of the national feather, when the first-line players included Wang Yihan, Wang Xin, Wang Shixian, Jiang Yanjiao, Wang Lin, these 5 players, but from the Uber Cup Asian qualifiers in February, Xuemei Paper began to break out, defeating Wang Yihan, Wang Shixian, Neville and other Top 10 players in succession, achieving a record of 30 consecutive wins. During this period, he won four championships in the All England Championship, the Indian Super Championship, the Asian Championship and the German Grand Prix. He also participated in the Uber Cup in May, becoming the new world champion.
With these achievements, Li Xuerui took the last train of the Olympic Games, and did not expect to be black to the end. From the world champion to the Olympic champion again, after Gong Zhichao and Zhang Ning, another Olympic champion.
After the Olympic Games, he did not relax, and won the championships of China and Hong Kong, and finally drew a perfect end at the year-end finals. So far, he has won 9 championships in a year, and in only one year he has become a world champion + Olympic champion, and this record is difficult to break. PS: If you can win the World Championship in 2013, you will be the fastest to become a women's singles Grand Slam player, but unfortunately lost the final to Thailand's talented girl Indanon
9 titles in the 2012 season
German Open
All England Open Badminton Championships
Asian Badminton Championships
Indian Badminton Super Tournament
London Olympics
China Open
Hong Kong Super Series
Super Series Finals
Uber
6 breakthroughs in the 2012 season (individual)
The first Super Tournament winner
The first All England Open champion
The first world champion
The first Olympic gold medal
Winner of the first local tournament
Winner of the first Grand Finals