Date | R | Kodus vs Võõrsil | - |
---|---|---|---|
06/11 09:20 | 1 | Anders Antonsen vs Anthony Sinisuka Ginting | 0-2 |
06/10 12:25 | 2 | Kunlavut Vitidsarn vs Anthony Sinisuka Ginting | Retired |
06/10 09:50 | 2 | Anders Antonsen vs Kodai Naraoka | 2-1 |
06/09 11:25 | 3 | Shi Feng Li vs Anthony Sinisuka Ginting | 1-2 |
06/09 10:35 | 3 | Kunlavut Vitidsarn vs Christo Popov | 2-0 |
06/09 09:20 | 3 | Chia Hao Lee vs Anders Antonsen | 1-2 |
06/09 07:10 | 3 | Kodai Naraoka vs Yu Qi Shi | 2-0 |
06/08 12:15 | 4 | Brian Yang vs Anthony Sinisuka Ginting | 0-2 |
06/08 10:35 | 4 | Chia Hao Lee vs Srikanth Kidambi | 2-0 |
06/08 09:20 | 4 | Christo Popov vs Kean Yew Loh | 2-0 |
06/08 08:20 | 4 | Shi Feng Li vs Hong Yang Weng | 2-1 |
06/08 07:25 | 4 | Yu Qi Shi vs Guang Zu Lu | 2-1 |
The Singapore Open is a badminton event that has been held in Singapore annually since 1929. Badminton World Federation categorised Singapore Open as one of the six BWF World Tour Super 750 events in the BWF events structure since 2023.
In 1929, the Singapore Badminton Association (SBA) was established to promote the sport and organise competitions. Its first official annual open championships was held in that same year with the best players chosen to represent Singapore in the regional tournaments. In 1957, it became an open invitation championship and was held annually until 1973. In 1987–1989, the tournament was known as the Konica Cup, an invitation championship exclusively for Asian players, and in 1990, for the first time entered the International Badminton Federation Grand Prix circuit. In 2007, Singapore Open was part of the BWF Super Series event. In 2018, it was designated as one of the seven BWF World Tour Super 500 events.