On June 6, Beijing time, the 23rd week of the BWF ranking in 2023 was announced, and the rankings of the players changed again. In addition to women's doubles and mixed doubles, men's doubles became the biggest highlight, with 2 pairs in the top three. However, it is somewhat regrettable that Olympic champion Wang Yilu and world champion Du Yue, who have only recently announced their retirement from the national team, no longer have a ranking.
The top two in the men's singles are still Axelon and Ginting, Thailand's brother Kunravut improved two places to 3rd with his performance at the Thailand Open, and Nara Oka Kōdai and Luo Jianyou dropped one place each to rank 4th and 5th respectively. The 6-10 places remain the same, followed by Jonatan, Zhou Tiancheng, Planoyi, Shi Yuqi, and Li Zijia. Li Shifeng was 12th, Lu Guangzu was 13th, Zhao Junpeng dropped one place to rank 17th, Weng Hongyang dropped one place to 27th, and Lei Lanxi rose one place to 74th.
The top 13 women's singles has not changed in any way, and Guoya is still four in the top 10. The 1-5 places are still Akane Yamaguchi, An Zhiying, Dai Ziying, Chen Yufei, He Bingjiao, and 6-10 are Ma Lin, Wang Zhiyi, Indanong, Mariska, Han Yue. Zhang Yiman is still ranked 17th, Gao Fangjie rose 6 places to 44th, for Gao Fangjie to try to seize every opportunity to participate in the competition, otherwise it is still difficult to compete in high-level events, and the competition for Olympic points is also more unfavorable.
In men's doubles, the first is still Alfian/Adianto, Liu Yuchen/Ou Yiyi ranked second, and Liang Weihang/Wang Chang, who won the championship in Thailand, rose three times in a row to third, and the Liang Wang combination is also the highest-ranked post-00s combination in the men's doubles. The 4-6 places are Xie Dingfeng/Su Weiyi, Lanji Reddy/Xie Ti, Homu Zhuolang/Kobayashi Yugo, and the 7-10 places are Wang Yaoxin/Zhang Yuyu, Hendra/Asan, Cui Baigui/Kim Yuanhao, Carnando/Martin. He Jiting/Zhou Haodong dropped one place to 14th, Ren Xiangyu/Tan Qiang rose one place to 19th, and Chen Baiyang/Liu Yi remained 54th.
The world number one in women's doubles is still occupied by Chen Qingchen/Jia Yifan, followed by South Korea's Shin Lee Lee Shao-hee/Baek Ha-na, Thailand-winning Kim Chao-young/Kong Hee-yong rose four places in a row to No. 3, Jang Shu-hyun/Jung Yu dropped one place to No. 4, and fifth was Rahayu/Ramadanti. The 6-10 places are Nao Matsuyama/Chiyo Shida, Na-eun Jung/Kim Hye-jung, Sokupan/Ravinda, Yuki Fukushima/Saika Hirota, Mayu Matsumoto/Nagahara and Kona. Li Wenmei/Liu Xuanxuan rose three places to 24th, Li Yijing/Luo Xumin remained unchanged at 38th, and Liu Shengshu/Tan Ning rose another 13 places to rank 39th, and the two youngsters set new career highs.
The mixed doubles are still dominated by Zheng Siwei/Huang Yaqiong, and no one can surpass the huge points advantage of the two in the short term. The second is Dechabo/Sha Xili, the third is Watanabe Yudai/Higashino Yusa, the fourth is Seo Seungjae/Cai Yoo-hyeon, and the fifth is Feng Yanzhe/Hwang Dongping. Kim Won-ho/Jung Na-eun rose three places to 6th, while Ji Kaier/Del Lu, Wu Shengyuan/Lai Jiemin each dropped one place to 7th and 8th place. After 00, Jiang Zhenbang/Wei Yaxin rose one place to ninth, and the tenth place was Kushayanto/Kusumawati. Cheng Xing/Chen Fanghui are still ranked 44th, and the mixed doubles combination of three pairs of Guoyu ranks among the top 10, and mixed doubles is still the most competitive event of Guoyu.