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Arisa Igarashi
Japanese badminton player (born 1996) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Arisa Igarashi (五十嵐 有紗, Igarashi Arisa; née Higashino; born 1 August 1996) is a Japanese badminton player.[3][4] She won bronze in the mixed team event at the Asian Junior Championships in 2013 and 2014, and competed at the 2014 World Junior Championships, winning two bronzes in the mixed doubles and team event.[4]
Higashino won her maiden Super 1000 tournament at the 2018 and 2021 All England Open in the mixed doubles event, partnering with Yuta Watanabe,[5] and had also won 2 consecutive bronze medals in mixed doubles at the 2020[6] and 2024 Summer Olympics.[7]
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Career
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Higashino was born in Iwamizawa, graduated from the Tomioka Senior High School, and joined the Unisys team in 2015.[4][8]
Higashino was selected to join national junior team, competed at the 2014 Asian Junior Championships, and helped the team win the bronze medal.[9] At the World Junior Championships in Alor Setar, Malaysia, she won the bronze medals in the mixed doubles event with Yuta Watanabe and in the mixed team event.[10][11] In June 2014, she made her first appearance in the senior international event at the Japan Open, competed in the mixed doubles with Watanabe, but the duo was defeated in the first round. She reached her first final in the senior international event at the 2015 Russian Open a BWF Grand Prix tournament, where she and her partner Watanabe were defeated by Chan Peng Soon and Goh Liu Ying.[12]
In 2016, Higashino won her first senior title at Vietnam International Challenge in the mixed doubles paired-up with Watanabe.[13] In 2017, Higashino and Watanabe have sufficient ranking points to entered the Superseries stage, and able to reached the semi-finals in the All England Open.[14]
2018: Break to top 5 BWF rankings, All England Open title
Significant progress occurs in 2018 season. Higashino with her partner Watanabe in the mixed doubles are able to break the international doubles stage by reaching third in the BWF rankings. Higashino and Watanabe became the first mixed doubles from Japan to win the All England Open since the tournament was first contested in 1899.[15] En route to the finals, they beating the top three seeds,[16] and then clinched the title after defeating the fifth seeded pair Zheng Siwei and Huang Yaqiong in the rubber game.[15] Both also won the Hong Kong Open after beating Wang Yilyu and Huang Dongping in the finals. It was their first win over the world silver medallists in six meetings.[17] Besides that, the duo finished in the semi-finals at the Malaysia, Japan, French, and Fuzhou China Opens;[18][19][20][21] as well in the year-end tournament BWF World Tour Finals.[22] Higashino also part of the Japanese national team that won the gold medal in the Asian Games.[23][24]
2019–2020: World Championships bronze
In the first half of the 2019 season, Higashino and Watanabe has won a title in the Malaysia Masters.[25] She reached the finals in the All England Open, losing to Zheng Siwei and Huang Yaqiong.[26] Together with the National team, she won the silver medal at the Asia Mixed Team Championships and at the Sudirman Cup.[27][28] In the second half of 2019 season, Higashino added a cap by defending the Hong Kong Open title,[29] and became a finalists in the Thailand Open.[30] Their journey in the remainder of the season does look quite difficult. In four meetings against Zheng Siwei and Huang Yaqiong, they only managed to win once, in the group stage of the World Tour Finals;[31] the rest were losses in the semi-finals of the World Championships, French Open and World Tour Finals.[32][33] The head-to-head record between the pairs stood at 2–8.[34]
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, numerous tournaments on the 2020 BWF World Tour were either cancelled or rescheduled for later in the year. Higashino competed in the national events in December, and managed to claim his fourth mixed doubles consecutive title at the Japanese National Championships with Watanabe.[35]
2021: Second All England title, Olympic bronze, and World Championships silver
In March, Higashino and Watanabe won the mixed doubles title in the All England Open.[36] In July, she competed at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics in the mixed doubles with Watanabe,[6] and clinched a bronze medal after winning the bronze medal game against Tang Chun Man and Tse Ying Suet in straight games.[37] After the Olympics, Watanabe and Higashino reached five finals, winning the Denmark and French Opens,[38][39] and became a finalist in the Indonesia Open,[40] World Tour Finals,[41] and also at the World Championships.[42]
2022–2023: World #1, third All England title, and first Japanese mixed doubles to win the Japan Open
In 2022, Higashino only won a title, where she and her partner, Watanabe, successfully to defend the All England Open in March.[43] Furthermore, she and her partner won the silver medal in the World Championships defeating by Zheng Siwei and Huang Yaqiong in the finals,[44] and a bronze medal in the Asian Championships defeating by Wang Yilyu and Huang Dongping in the semi-finals.[45] Another results that they achieved in 2022 were the finalists in the Indonesia and Japan Opens.[46][47] Higashino and Watanabe then reached their career high as world number 1 in the BWF mixed doubles ranking on 8 November 2022.[48]
Higashino started the 2023 season by competing in the Malaysia Open, where she and her partner, Watanabe, finished as the finalists.[49] In the following week, they emerged as a champion in the India Open, after their opponent Wang Yilyu and Huang Dongping withdrawn from the final match.[50] In March, they unable to defend their All England Open title, since Watanabe struggling with injury in the second round against Kim Won-ho and Jeong Na-eun.[51] Higashino helps the national team advanced to the knocked out stage in the Sudirman Cup,[52] where the team finished in the semi-finals.[53] In June, Higashino and Watanabe reached the finals in the Singapore and Indonesia Opens.[54][55] In the next tournaments, they stopped in the quarter-finals of the Canada Open to Taiwanese pairing Lee Jhe-huei and Hsu Ya-ching,[56] and then in the semi-finals of the Korea Open to Chinese rising star Jiang Zhenbang and Wei Yaxin.[57] The duo then won the Japan Open, becoming the first ever Japanaese pairing to claimed the Japan Open title since it was first contested in 1982.[58] They clinched the bronze medal in the World Championships defeating by Seo Seung-jae and Chae Yoo-jung in the semi-finals.[59] She competed in the 2022 Asian Games, won a silver in the mixed doubles and a gold in the women's team event.[60] In the rest of the season, Higashino and Watanabe finished as the semi-finalists in the French Open,[61] Japan Masters,[62] as well in the year-end finals tournament the World Tour Finals.[63]
2024
Higashino and Watanabe began the 2024 season by winning the Malaysia Open.[64] In the first half of the season, they reached the final of the All England Open,[65] and the quarterfinals of the India Open,[66] French Open,[67] and Asian Championships.[68] Leading up to the Paris Olympics, the pair experienced early-round losses at the Singapore and Indonesia Opens.[69][70] Higashino then made her second Olympic appearance at 2024 Paris Olympics, where she and Watanabe won another bronze medal, defeating South Korea's Seo Seung-jae and Chae Yoo-jung in the bronze medal match.[7] Following a quarterfinal loss at the Japan Open shortly after the Olympics, Higashino ended her 13-year partnership with Watanabe.[71]
Following the Olympics, Higashino married and began competing under her married name, Arisa Igarashi.[72] She announced a focus on women's doubles and formed a new partnership with Ayako Sakuramoto.[73] The pair debuted on the BWF World Tour at the Japan Masters in November, losing in the second round to Olympic bronze medalists Nami Matsuyama and Chiharu Shida.[74] Concluding the year, they reached the final of the All Japan Badminton Championships in December, where they were again defeated by Matsuyama and Shida; this performance secured their selection to the Japanese National Team for 2025.[75]
2025
In January 2025, Igarashi and Sakuramoto secured their first title as a pair at the Super 750 India Open, defeating Olympic silver medalists Liu Shengshu and Tan Ning of China in the quarterfinals, and Kim Hye-jeong and Kong Hee-yong of South Korea in the final.[76][77] The following month, at the Asia Mixed Team Championships, their final tournament together as a pair, they won their women's doubles match against China's Chen Qingchen and Wang Tingge.[78] Their partnership was officially dissolved in April 2025, a decision made by the players in March after approximately six months together. Igarashi announced her intention to continue competing in women's doubles with a new partner.[79] On 8 July, it was announced that Igarashi would form a new partnership with Chiharu Shida, an Olympic bronze medalist. The new pair is scheduled to debut at the Hong Kong Open in September, following the conclusion of Shida's partnership with Nami Matsuyama at the World Championships in August.[80][81]
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Personal life
On 28 August 2024, she announced her marriage to former badminton player, Yu Igarashi.[82]
Achievements
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Olympic Games
Mixed doubles
World Championships
Mixed doubles
Asian Games
Mixed doubles
Asian Championships
Mixed doubles
World Junior Championships
Mixed doubles
BWF World Tour (12 titles, 10 runners-up)
The BWF World Tour, which was announced on 19 March 2017 and implemented in 2018,[83] is a series of elite badminton tournaments sanctioned by the Badminton World Federation (BWF). The BWF World Tour is divided into levels of World Tour Finals, Super 1000, Super 750, Super 500, Super 300, and the BWF Tour Super 100.[84]
Women's doubles
Mixed doubles
BWF Grand Prix (1 runner-up)
The BWF Grand Prix had two levels, the Grand Prix and Grand Prix Gold. It was a series of badminton tournaments sanctioned by the Badminton World Federation (BWF) and played between 2007 and 2017.
Mixed doubles
- BWF Grand Prix tournament
BWF International Challenge/Series (1 title)
Mixed doubles
- BWF International Challenge tournament
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References
External links
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