Serbia and Montenegro national badminton team

The Serbia and Montenegro national badminton team (Serbian: Репрезентација Србије и Црне Горе у бадминтону) represented Serbia and Montenegro in international badminton competitions. The national team reached its highest ranking at 99 on 1 July 2011.[1]

Serbia and Montenegro
AssociationBadminton Savez Jugoslavije (BSJ)
ConfederationBE (Europe)
BWF ranking
Highest ranking99 (1 July 2011)

The team ceased to exist soon after the independence of both Montenegro and Serbia which led to the formation of the Serbia national badminton team and the Montenegro national badminton team.

History

Following the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1992, the governing body of Yugoslavian badminton, Badminton Savez Jugoslavije was revived in 19 September 1993 and became affiliated with the Badminton World Federation. The team competed in international individual events, which were the Slovenian International, Bulgarian International and the Yugoslavian International.[2] The team also competed in the Balkan Mixed Team Badminton Championships.[3] The country once hosted the championships in 1997.[4]

Mixed team

Badminton Savez Jugoslavije sent a total of 6 players to compete in the 1995 Balkan Mixed Team Badminton Championships.[5][6] The team finished in 5th place after losing 3–2 to Greece.[3] In 1997, the team competed in the 1997 Balkan Mixed Team Championships as the host team and placed 5th.[3] In 2005, the team placed 5th in the 2005 Balkan Mixed Team Championships after winning 3–2 against Greece's second squad.[7] Before the split of Serbia and Montenegro, the team competed their last tournament at the 2006 Balkan Mixed Team Badminton Championships. The team lost narrowly to Moldova but dominated North Macedonia 5–0 in their second match. The team finished in 5th place.[3]

Competitive record

European Team Championships

Helvetia Cup

Year Result
Switzerland 1962 Part of  Yugoslavia
West Germany 1963
Netherlands 1964
Austria 1965
Belgium 1966
Switzerland 1967
Norway 1968
Czechoslovakia 1969
West Germany 1970
Netherlands 1971
Austria 1973
Belgium 1975
Soviet Union 1977
Austria 1979
Norway 1981
Switzerland 1983
Poland 1985
Northern Ireland 1987
Hungary 1989
Bulgaria 1991
Austria 1993 Did not enter
Cyprus 1995
France 1997
Northern Ireland 1999
Czech Republic 2001
Portugal 2003
Cyprus 2005

Mixed team

Year Result
Turkey 1995 Round robin − 5th
Greece 1996 Did not enter
Serbia and Montenegro 1997 Round robin − 5th
Turkey 1998 Did not enter
Greece 1999 Round robin − 6th
Bulgaria 2000 Round robin − 6th
Bulgaria 2001 Round robin − 6th
Greece 2002 Round robin − 6th
Romania 2003 Round robin − 6th
Turkey 2004 Round robin − 6th
Greece 2005 Fourth place
Turkey 2006 Round robin − 5th
**Red border color indicates tournament was held on home soil.

Junior competitive record

Suhandinata Cup

Year Result
China 2000 Did not enter
South Africa 2002
Canada 2004

European Junior Team Championships

Mixed team

Year Result
Denmark 1975 Part of  Yugoslavia
Malta 1977
West Germany 1979
Scotland 1981
Finland 1983
Austria 1985
Poland 1987
England 1989
Hungary 1991
Bulgaria 1993 Did not enter
Slovakia 1995
Czech Republic 1997
Scotland 1999
Poland 2001
Denmark 2003
Netherlands 2005

Mixed team

Year Result
Switzerland 1984 Part of  Yugoslavia
Hungary 1986
Wales 1988
Austria 1990
Czechoslovakia 1992
Czech Republic 1994 Did not enter
Portugal 1996
Finland 1998
Austria 2000
Slovenia 2002
Austria 2004
Slovakia 2006
**Red border color indicates tournament was held on home soil.

Players

Squad

As of 1998

Men's team

Name DoB/Age Ranking of event
MS MD XD
Jovan Marković (1976-06-29)29 June 1976 (aged 22) - - -
Zoran Stepanović (1969-03-15)15 March 1969 (aged 29) - - -
Radomir Jovović (1979-12-15)15 December 1979 (aged 19) - - -
Vladimir Stanojevic 1974 (1974) (aged 24) - - -

Women's team

Name DoB/Age Ranking of event
MS MD XD
Jelena Obrić 1972 (1972) (aged 26) - - -
Jovanka Knežević 1972 (1972) (aged 26) - - -
Ana Marić 1976 (1976) (aged 22) - - -
Marija Glogovac 1973 (1973) (aged 25) - - -

References

  1. "BWF - BWF World Team Rankings". bwf.tournamentsoftware.com. Retrieved 2023-03-31.
  2. "Yugoslavian Int 198 (I)". www.tournamentsoftware.com. Retrieved 2023-03-31.
  3. "ARHIVA REZULTATA BADMINTON SAVEZA SRBIJE". Badminton Savez Srbije. Archived from the original on 2 December 2011. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
  4. "Statistika u nacionalnom sportu RS_Badminton savez Srbije" (PDF). Badminton savez Srbije. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
  5. Karakuş, Ş; Küçük, Veysel; Koç, H. (1996). "1995 BALKAN ŞAMPİYONASINA KATILAN BADMINTON SPORCULARININ REAKSİYON ZAMANLARI". S2CID 165170576. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. "1995 BALKAN ŞAMPİYONASINA KATILAN BADMINTON SPORCULARINI N REAKSİYON ZAMANLARI". Dergipark. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
  7. "Τέσσερα μετάλλια στο Βαλκανικό μπάντμιντον - Sports - Γενικά". sport-fm.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 2023-05-01.
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