Nanna Vainio
Nanna Vainio | |
---|---|
Personal information | |
Country | Finland |
Born | Ekenäs, Finland | 2 May 1991
Height | 1.74 m (5 ft 8+1⁄2 in) |
Handedness | Right |
Women's singles | |
Career record | 109 wins, 124 losses |
Highest ranking | 56 (3 November 2016) |
Nanna Vainio (born 29 May 1991)[1] is a right handed Finnish badminton player who lives in Espoo in Finland. Since 2009 she has been the Finnish singles champion several times.
Career
Vainio was born on Ekenäs in 1991. She first competed internationally in Latvia when she was 14 and she has been in the national team since 2008.[2] She graduated from high school in Espoo Mattlidens gymnasium in 2010, after which she studied for a degree in information management and business administration at Loughborough University in England.[3] In 2013, she moved to Copenhagen, where she studied for a master's degree and was trained by Anu Nieminen at the Copenhagen Badminton Center. She graduated in 2015 and has since been training again in Finland.[4]
Vainio has been ranked as 56th in the world and she represented her country at the 2016 Summer Olympics. She lost in the first round of the tournament to the Spanish player Carolina Marín[1] who has been ranked number one in the world.[5]
Achievements
BWF International Challenge/Series
Women's singles
Year | Tournament | Opponent | Score | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | Slovenian International | Carola Bott | 13–21, 10–21 | Runner-up |
2015 | Iceland International | Mette Poulsen | 11–21, 9–21 | Runner-up |
2015 | Mauritius International | Airi Mikkelä | 21–16, 21–11 | Winner |
2015 | Morocco International | Lianne Tan | 21–15, 22–24, 8–21 | Runner-up |
2016 | Iceland International | Julie Dawal Jakobsen | 17–21, 6–21 | Runner-up |
2016 | Peru International | Airi Mikkelä | 13–21, 17–21 | Runner-up |
- BWF International Challenge tournament
- BWF International Series tournament
- BWF Future Series tournament
References
- ^ a b "Nanna Vainio". Rio 2016. Archived from the original on 6 August 2016. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
- ^ Nanna Vainio, BWFBadminton, Retrieved 28 August 2016
- ^ Mainio Vainio oikealla tiellä, Isaksson, Janne, Issue s. 8–9, Sportpressen, Ajankohta = Talvi 2011–2012, Viitattu = 29.3.2014
- ^ Nanna Vainio Archived 2016-08-16 at the Wayback Machine, Rio Team: Pelaajat, Retrieved 28 August 2016
- ^ "Carolina Marín". Archived from the original on 2020-04-18.