Tracey Hallam

Tracey Jayne Hallam (born 24 March 1975) is a former English badminton player.

Tracey Hallam
Personal information
Country England
Born (1975-03-24) 24 March 1975
Burton-on-Trent, England
Height160 cm (5 ft 3 in)
HandednessLeft
CoachIan Wright and Yvette Yun Luo
Women's Singles
Highest ranking7
BWF profile

Career

Hallam played badminton at the 2004 Summer Olympics. In women's singles, she defeated Juliane Schenk of Germany and Camilla Martin of Denmark in the first two rounds. In the quarterfinals, Hallam lost to Mia Audina of the Netherlands 11-0, 11-9.

At the 1998 Commonwealth Games Hallam won the gold in the women's team event and bronze in the singles event. At the 2002 Commonwealth Games she won the gold in the mixed team event and silver in the singles event. She won gold in the women's singles at the 2006 Commonwealth Games.

She participated in the 2008 Beijing Olympics in the Women's singles event but she was knocked out in the third round by Xu Huaiwen of Germany (21-10, 21-7).

Achievements

Commonwealth Games

Women's singles

Year Venue Opponent Score Result
2006 Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, Melbourne, Australia Wong Mew Choo 21–12, 21–15 Gold
2002 Bolton Arena, Manchester, England Li Li 5–7, 7–5, 7–8, 0–7 Silver
1998 Kuala Lumpur Badminton Stadium, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Kelly Morgan 6–11, 4–11 Bronze

World University Championships

Women's doubles

Year Venue Partner Opponent Score Result
1996 Strasbourg, France Gail Emms Tsai Hui Min
Chen Li Jin
12–15, 17–15, 11–15 Bronze

Grand Prix

Women's singles

Year Tournament Opponent Score Result
2005 Chinese Taipei Open Seo Yoon-hee 11–9, 11–7 Winner
2001 Thailand Open Marina Andrievskaya 0–7, 7–3, 7–4, 4–7, 7–1 Winner
  BWF Grand Prix tournament

International Challenge/Series/Satellite/European Circuit

Women's singles

Year Tournament Opponent Score Result
2013 Auckland International Fontaine Mica Chapman 21–15, 21–16 Winner
2007 Le Volant d'Or de Toulouse Anna Rice 21–18, 21–15 Winner
2007 Vietnam International Maria Elfira Christina 21–15, 21–15 Winner
2007 Hatzor International Elena Prus 21–9, 21–15 Winner
2007 Banuinvest International Rosaria Yusfin Pungkasari 21–14, 21–14 Winner
2004 Portugal International Ella Karachkova 7–11, 11–4, 11–9 Winner
2001 Austrian International Karina de Wit 11–9, 11–5 Winner
2001 Spanish International Katarzyna Krasowska 11–3, 10–13, 11–0 Winner
2000 Slovak International Kamila Augustyn 11–9, 11–1 Winner
1997 Portugal International Anne Gibson 10–12, 4–11 Runner-up
1996 Hungarian International Johanna Holgersson 11–2, 11–1 Winner


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