Noah Haase: Dutch Open Quarterfinals Run

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In the eighth final in Maaspoort Den Bosch, Haase defeated the fifth placed ADE RESKY DWICAHYO from Azerbaijan in front of his own audience. It became 11-21 and then twice 21-18 for the Dutchman.

Potuizen / Stoffelen push on to last eight

In the mixed doubles, Inger Pothuizen and Timo Stoffelen reached the quarterfinals. The Oranje duo won 22-20 and 21-16 from the German couple Jonathan Desp / Selin Hubsch. Kirsten de Wit and her French partner Aymeric Tores narrowly lost 23-21 and 22-20 to Patrick and Franziska Volkmann (Germany, 2). The couple Dennis Koppen / Cheryl Seinen lost in two games of the first -placed Danish duo against Kirculner Kolding / Mette Werg.

Lars Kros and Kelly from outside had a walk-over and thus moved on to the quarterfinals.

Duo his / titosentono in kwart finals

In the women’s doubles we see Cheryl Seinen and Alyssa Tirtosentono on Saturday in the quarterfinals. After an exciting game, the Dutch couple won 29-27 and 21-14 against Selin Hubsch / Amelie Lehmann (Germany).

The duo Kirsten de Wit / Meerte Loos did not struck it with draw in the eighth finals against the first -placed French double against Margot Lambert / Camile Pognante. The French women were 21-14 and 21-12 a size too big. Kelly from outside and her Swiss partner Aline Muller lost in two games of the Danish tandem Kathrine Vang / Mette Werge.

Unfortunately, there is no Dutch input in the female and men’s doubles in the quarterfinals. In Het Vrouwenkel, Flora Wang of the seventh-placed Francaise Anna Tatranova lost 21-8 and 21-13. Gijs Duijs and Lars Kros lost in the men’s dubils of the Norwegians Torjus Fated and Jonas Osthassel in two games.

The Yonex Dutch Open will last until Sunday 5 October.

Posted by the editors
Obtained through Badminton Netherlands
Item photo by YouTube Badminton Europe

James Whitfield

James Whitfield is Archysport's racket sports and golf specialist, bringing a global perspective to tennis, badminton, and golf coverage. Based between London and Singapore, James has covered Grand Slam tournaments, BWF World Tour events, and major golf championships on five continents. His reporting combines on-the-ground access with deep knowledge of the technical and strategic elements that separate elite athletes from the rest of the field. James is fluent in English, French, and Mandarin, giving him unique access to athletes across the global tennis and badminton circuits.

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