Wang crowned new queen of England
Chinese ace overcomes South Korea's An to reign at All England final, ending nation's seven-year drought
On Sunday night, the lights at Utilita Arena in Birmingham, England, focused sharply on a single stage: the badminton court.
When Wang Zhiyi sent a steep cross-court smash skimming An Se-young's back line, the scoreboard froze at 21–19. After 59 tense minutes, the women's singles final of the All England Open Badminton Championships was decided.
For a moment, Wang could barely process it. Only seconds earlier, a commanding 20–15 lead had been suddenly narrowed to 20–19, as An mounted a late charge. The arena held its breath with every rally.
Then it sank in.
The winning shot did more than clinching the title. It ended Wang's 10-match losing streak to An, halted the South Korean star's staggering 36-match cross-season winning run, and returned the All England women's singles crown to China for the first time in seven years.
Wang had taken the first game 21–15, and looked poised to close out the match after building that 20–15 advantage in the second. But world No 1 An, known for her relentless defense, clawed back four straight points to make it 20–19 and push the final toward a tense denouement.
Before the match, the head-to-head record had been lopsided: 22 meetings, only four wins for Wang, and 10 straight defeats over the past 18 months — a run some observers dubbed the "An Se-young complex".
But this time it was different.
In the decisive rally, Wang resisted reckless attacks. A subtle feint shifted An's balance, and a split-second later came the razor-angled cross-court smash that sealed the title.
The victory marks a milestone in Wang's career on one of badminton's grandest stages.
Founded in 1899 and organized by the Badminton World Federation, the All England Open is often called badminton's "unofficial world championships", a Super 1000 tournament rich in history and prestige.
Most predictions favored An, fresh off a semifinal win over Tokyo Olympic champion Chen Yufei and on track to become the first South Korean to claim three All England women's singles titles.
Wang, however, had a different plan.
Instead of chasing speed and stamina, the 25-year-old slowed the tempo, using patient four-corner rallies to stretch the court and exploit An's backhand.
Even when she fell behind early in the first game, Wang stayed composed and quickly fought back to seize control of the rally. After the final point, emotion finally took over.
In the mixed zone, Wang reflected on her approach: "The key today was my mentality. In previous matches, I might not have stayed patient for so many shots. Today I did — and that's when my opponent made mistakes."
Even holding the trophy, disbelief lingered.
"I'm incredibly excited. I still can't quite believe I won. On court, I focused only on my tactics. The most important thing was believing in myself."
The title — her 12th on the BWF World Tour — carried deeper significance: China's first All England women's singles crown since Chen won the last in 2019.
At a pivotal stage in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics cycle, Wang's breakthrough shattered An's aura of invincibility and will have injected fresh confidence into China's women's badminton program.
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