- 1964 Thomas Cup
The
Thomas Cup competition is an international team tournament for supremacy in men'sbadminton (its female counterpart is theUber Cup ). Beginning in 1948-1949 it was held every three years until 1982 and thereafter it has been held every two years. Twenty-six national teams, each (except the defending champion nation) starting from one of four qualifying zones (Asia, Australasia, Europe, and Pan America), vied for the Thomas Cup during the 1963-1964 badminton season. Qualifying zone winners played-off in Tokyo, Japan for the right to face defending champion Indonesia, which was exempt from earlier "ties" (team matches), in a conclusive challenge round tie. Prior to 1964 the defending champion nation had regularly hosted both the inter-zone playoffs and the challenge round, but a rules change effective that year prevented the same defending champion nation from having this advantage for two successive Thomas Cup seasons. For a more detailed description of the Thomas Cup format see Wikipedia's general article on theThomas Cup .Intra-zone summary
With Malaya and India competing in the Australasian zone, Japan competing in the Pan American zone, and Hong Kong defaulting, Thailand , the 1961 Thomas Cup runner-up, shut out Taiwan (9–0) to win the Asian zone. After missing the 1960-1961 series,
Charoen Wattanasin had returned to the team, while Thailand's other top singles player,Channarong Ratanaseangsuang (living in California) would rejoin the team for the inter-zone matches.In the Australasian zone a rebuilding Malaya (soon to be Malaysia), with no hold-overs from its champion teams of the 1950's, defeated India (8–1) and Australia (9–0) to advance to the inter-zone playoffs. All-rounder
Teh Kew San went eight for eight in this set of ties. Previously the domain of only the USA and Canada, the Pan American zone welcomed Jamaica, Mexico, and, somewhat incongruously, Japan. The Japanese, however, proved their mettle by shutting out Mexico and by defeating Canada 8–1. In the zone final against the USA they eliminated the nation which had won all previous Pan American zone qualifications 7–2, despite two singles victories by American stalwart Jim Poole. Playing doubles and third singles, Japan's team captain,Eiichi Nagai won all of his nine matches in this series of ties.Denmark again won the European zone handily, brushing aside England 8–1 in the final. The Danish lineup boasted five time All-England singles champion
Erland Kops (still only 27), the reigning All-England championKnud Aage Nielsen , the All-England singles runner-up,Henning Borch , and the reigning and six time All-England doubles champions,Finn Kobbero andJorgen Hammergaard Hansen . With the final ties scheduled for temperate Tokyo rather than equatorial and partisan Jakarta, many observers thought that this would be Denmark's "year."Inter-zone playoffs
5 teams from 4 regions took part in this edition. As defending champion, Indonesia was exempt until the Challenge Round.
;
Australasia
*flagicon|Malaya Malaya
*flagicon|INA Indonesia (exempt until "Challenge Round");
Asia
*flagicon|THA Thailand;
Europe
*flagicon|DEN Denmark;
Americas
*flagicon|JPN JapanCollectively, the players contesting in Tokyo in mid May were probably the strongest group that had yet appeared at the final venue of the Thomas Cup competition. Even "third string" singles matches often pitted true world class opponents against each other. With more difficulty than might have been expected, Thailand eliminated the host country's team 6–3. Ratanaseangsuang and Wattanasin won hard fought singles matches, but the vaunted Thai doubles teams could earn only a split with their equally quick and aggressive Japanese counterparts.
Yoshinori Itagaki had a hand in two winning matches for Japan. In the other semifinal Denmark's powerful singles lineup shutout Malaya's, though individual matches were competitive. Eighteen year oldTan Aik Huang served notice of future achievement by earning twenty-six points from Erland Kops. Denmark advanced 7–2 with Malaya's wins coming against the Danish "second string" doubles.The inter-zone final between Denmark and Thailand was a fierce struggle featuring five three game matches. Denmark won four of the five to avenge its 1961 defeat and squeeze past Thailand 6–3. Kobbero and Hammergaard Hansen "got even" with the same pairs (Bhornchima and Kanchanaraphi; Chumkum and Vatanatham) that had defeated them in '61. Kops won three game singles matches against both Ratanaseansuang and Wattanasin. As had happened against Malaya, however, he lost both of his doubles matches paired with
P. E. Nielsen . The result of the Danish strategy of using Kops in the maximum number of matches in all ties was that he had now played 20 pressure filled games (twice as many as any of his teammates) without losing a singles match but without winning a doubles. This strategy was not altered, however, for the decisive "Challenge Round" against Indonesia.emifinal round
References
* [http://tangkis.tripod.com/thomas/final64.htm Smash: 1963-64 Thomas Cup - Challenge Round]
*Herbert Scheele ed., The "International Badminton Federation Handbook for 1967" (Canterbury, Kent, England: J. A. Jennings Ltd., 1967) 82–87.
*Pat Davis, The "Guinness Book of Badminton" (Enfield, Middlesex, England: Guinness Superlatives Ltd., 1983) 122, 123.External links
* [http://www.internationalbadminton.org/tc_1963-64.html Thomas Cup (1963-64) Results] at "
Badminton World Federation "
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