Wang Lin (badminton)

Wang Lin
王琳
Personal information
Born (1989-03-30) March 30, 1989
Height1.74 m (5 ft 9 in)
Weight57 kg (126 lb)
Sport
CountryChina
SportBadminton
HandednessRight
Coached byZhang Ning
Women's singles
Highest ranking1 (8 October 2009)
Current rankingRetired (in 2013)
BWF profile
Medal record
Women's badminton
Representing  China
World Championships
2010 Paris Women's singles
2009 Hyderabad Women's singles
Sudirman Cup
2009 Guangzhou Mixed team
Asian Championships
2008 Johor Bahru Women's singles
2009 Suwon Women's singles
Summer Universiade
2007 Bangkok Mixed team
2007 Bangkok Women's singles
2007 Bangkok Women's doubles
World Junior Championships
2007 Waitakere City Girls' singles
2007 Waitakere City Mixed team
2004 Richmond Mixed team
2004 Richmond Girls' singles
Asian Junior Championships
2005 Jakarta Girls' singles
2005 Jakarta Girls' team
2004 Hwacheon Girls' team
2004 Hwacheon Girls' singles

Wang Lin (born March 30, 1989, in Hangzhou) is a badminton player from China. Wang Lin was crowned the world champion after winning the gold medal at the 2010 BWF World Championships held at Paris defeating fellow Chinese Wang Xin 21–11, 19–21, 21–13.

In 2006, the 17-year-old, Wang Lin beat Xie Xingfang in the final of the China Masters Super Series.

Shortly after her World Championship triumph in Paris, Wang Lin suffered a severe knee ligament tear during her match against Maria Febe Kusumastuti in China Masters Super Series tournament. The injury was so severe to the extent it ruled out Wang Lin completely from playing for almost six months after her knee operation. From there, her ranking starts to decline and eventually Wang Lin fell out of favour from the first-team line-up as her jittery comeback coincided with the emergence of Wang Shixian and Wang Xin.

After making a comeback, she was clearly far from her best and has not achieved the same success as she once did prior to sustaining the injury. Wang Lin once cited fear of injury recurrence was one of the main reasons she was not able to play at her best.

On December 4, 2013, she announced her retirement on Tencent Weibo.