Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Chloe Birch

English badminton player (born 1995) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chloe Birch
Remove ads

Chloe Francesca Hannah Coney (née Birch; born 16 September 1995) is an English badminton player.[1]

Quick Facts Personal information, Full name ...
Remove ads

Career

She was introduced to badminton through school and started playing at age eight at Abbeydale Badminton Club. Birch received the Michael Vaughan Award from Silverdale School, and competed at the Australian Youth Olympic Festival in 2013.[2] She was the runner-up in 2016 English National Championships women's singles.[3]

Birch graduated from Loughborough University with sport and exercise science degree.[4]

Birch was part of the English team that won the mixed team bronze at the 2018 Commonwealth Games in Gold Coast.[5][6] She won the women's doubles silver medal at the 2019 European Games partnered with Lauren Smith.[7]

In 2023, she won the doubles national title (her seventh national title) at the English National Badminton Championships, at the David Ross Sports Village in Nottingham.[8] The following year in 2024, she won an eighth title and this moved her to joint 10th in the all time list for women.[9]

Remove ads

Achievements

Summarize
Perspective

Commonwealth Games

Thumb
The six medallists in the women's badminton doubles at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham. Left to right: Chloe Birch and Lauren Smith (England), Pearly Tan and Thinaah Muralitharan (Malaysia), Treesa Jolly and Gayathri Gopichand (India).

Women's doubles

More information Year, Venue ...

European Games

Women's doubles

More information Year, Venue ...

European Championships

Women's doubles

More information Year, Venue ...

BWF World Tour (1 title, 1 runner-up)

The BWF World Tour, which was announced on 19 March 2017 and implemented in 2018,[10] 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.[11]

Women's doubles

More information Year, Tournament ...

BWF International Challenge/Series (10 titles, 15 runners-up)

Women's singles

More information Year, Tournament ...

Women's doubles

More information Year, Tournament ...

Mixed doubles

More information Year, Tournament ...
  BWF International Challenge tournament
  BWF International Series tournament
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads