Liang Weikeng and Wang Chang (right) celebrate their doubles win in the Thomas Cup final in Chengdu on Sunday. The pair helped Team China's men win an 11th title in the competition. WEI XIAOHAO/CHINA DAILY
Not quite the tough test it expected, but a good enough warm-up for a gold hunt in Paris.
Team China's cruise to a record-extending 16th Uber Cup title has served up a huge confidence booster, as it seeks to regain supremacy of the women's game at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
Roared on by a vocal home crowd at the High-Tech Zone Sports Center in Chengdu, the Chinese women's badminton squad proved its mighty collective strength on Sunday after sweeping Indonesia 3-0 in the final to retake the biannual world women's team championship crown in the Sichuan provincial capital.
The recapturing of the prestigious trophy, following China's final loss to South Korea in 2022, needs to be put into perspective, though, with several top rivals, such as Korea's world No 1 An Se-young and Japan's two-time world champion Akane Yamaguchi, sidelined by injury, providing the host a lighter challenge on its home court.
Luo Yigang, singles coach for Team China, hailed the Chengdu run as a critical tuneup for his athletes, especially in the high-stakes team format, in time for the ultimate test in Paris.
"We didn't get to play some of our toughest rivals this time, but no one should take the credit away from our players," Luo said in the post-final news conference on Sunday.
"They overcame strong challenges from within, dealing with the pressure, making a stand for the whole team.
"The experience here is invaluable and will help us go for golds at the Paris Olympics," said Luo.
"We did a good job as a team, I am extremely happy," said reigning Olympic singles champion Chen Yufei, who is ranked second in the world after South Korea's An.
As the most successful women's program in badminton at the Olympics, Chinese female shuttlers have racked up 10 gold medals — both singes and doubles combined — at the Games since the sport's debut in 1992.
In recent years, however, its dominance has been challenged by its East Asian neighbors.
Now, with Chen still at her best and the country's second-ranked singles ace He Bingjiao tested and improved at the Uber Cup, the Chinese women's contingent, which also boasts world No 1 doubles pair Chen Qingchen and Jia Yifan, looks primed for Paris.
Chen Yufei got the host's final against Indonesia off to a flying start, conquering 9th-ranked Gregoria Mariska Tunjung, 21-7, 21-16, to complete the opening singles rubber in just 38 minutes.
Following that scintillating start, Chinese doubles pair Chen Qingchen and Jia produced an equally dominant 21-11, 21-8 rout of Indonesia's Siti Fadia Silva Ramadhanti and Ribka Sugiarto in 39 minutes to take a comfortable 2-0 lead in the best-of-five team final.
China's second singles player He overcame a first-set scare to defeat Ester Nurumi Tri Wardoyo 10-21,21-15, 21-17 in the third match, clinching the host's golden finish and sending the enthusiastic Chengdu crowd into a frenzy.
"When we step on the court, we always believe in ourselves," Chen Qingchen said of the team's surging confidence.
"After the failure in the Tokyo final, we are now determined to go for the gold in Paris this summer," said Jia, who, alongside Chen Qingchen, lost the Tokyo Olympic doubles final to Indonesia's Greysia Polii and Apriyani Rahayu.