Indonesian badminton player

badminton player

Hendra Carta Negara
Privacy
birth name Tan Jo Hump
nation

Indonesia

born (1937-08-11) August 11, 1937 (83 years old)
Bandung, Dutch East Indies
representative

Indonesia

men’s badminton
Thomas Cup

1958 Singapore men’s team

1961 Jakarta men’s team

1964 Tokyo men’s team
Asian Games

1962 Jakarta men’s singles

1962 Jakarta men’s team

1962 Jakarta men’s doubles

Tan Jo Hump (Indonesian name: Hendra Carta NegaraChinese : Chen Youfu; Pinyin: Chen Yufu; Born August 11, 1937) is an Indonesian badminton player who, along with Perison Neville and an excellent doubles team, abdicated the 1958 Thomas Cup champion Malaya, laying the foundations for the Indonesian badminton dynasty.

Tan Joe Hok lived in Bandung until finishing high school. He holds degrees in Chemistry and Biology from Baylor University, Texas, USA.

He became the first Indonesian to win the All England Open in 1959 and the first Indonesian to win a gold medal at the Asian Games at home in 1962, to win consecutive US Open and Canadian Open singles titles in 1959 and 1960. He has many other notable achievements as a player and coach in the field of badminton, especially winning all but one of the singles for Indonesia’s world champion Thomas Cup (men’s international) team in 1958, 1961 and 1964.

personal

He married former badminton player Goei Kiok Nio in 1965 and they have two children. During the racist US dictatorship of Suharto, Tan Joe Hok struggled to establish full citizenship in Indonesia because he was unable to obtain the SBKRI, a mandatory document for non-Indigenous peoples, especially Chinese Indonesians. “It won’t be difficult for us to move abroad, but we don’t want to do that because we’re Indonesians. Even if it rains gold abroad, we will remain on the land where the Indonesian blood was.”

education

  • Elementary, middle and high schools in Bandung
  • Department of Chemistry and Biology, Baylor University, Texas, USA (1959-1963)

Career and performance

  • Surabaya National Championship Winner (1956)
  • Singapore Thomas Cup Winner (1958) Indonesia Squad Team Member
  • Indonesia’s first male badminton player to win All England (1959)
  • Indonesia’s first male badminton player to win Asian Games gold medal (1962)
  • Squad Team Thomas Cup Indonesia 멤버 (1964–1967)
  • Mexican badminton coach (1969–1970)
  • Hong Kong badminton coach (1971)
  • Kuala Lumpur Indonesia Thomas Cup Team Coach (1984)
  • Badminton coach of PB Djarum Kudus
  • Mandala Pest Control Director (1973 년부터)
  • SIWO/PWI Jaya’s version of Best Sport Coach (1984)

open tournament

men’s singles

year tournament opponent score result
1957 Indian Championship

Amrit Dewan

15–2, 15–7

champion

1958 East India Championship

Eddie Yusuf

15–10, 15–9

champion

1959 All England Open

perissoneville

15–8, 10–15, 15–3

champion

1959 Thailand Championship

Charoen Wattanasin

15–10, 9–15, 15–6

champion

1959 Canadian Open

Charoen Wattanasin

15–4, 15–10

champion

1959 US Open

Charoen Wattanasin

7–15, 15–5, 18–14

champion

1960 Canadian Open

Finn Cobero

10—15, 15—8, 15—13

champion

1960 US Open

Charoen Wattanasin

15–6, 15–8

champion

1962 US Open

perissoneville

15–17, 17–18

Runner-up

men’s doubles

year tournament partner opponent score result
1960 Canadian Open

Charoen Wattanasin

Im Say Heck

tecuic acid

8–15, 8–15

Runner-up

1963 All England Open

perissoneville

Finn Cobero

JH Hansen

6–15, 5–15

Runner-up

1969 Canadian Open

Charoen Wattanasin

Tony Jordan

Robert McCoy

7–15, 6–15

Runner-up

doubles in the mix

year tournament partner opponent score result
1960 Canadian Open

Scilla Capadia

Finn Cobero

Jean Miller

21–16, 11–21, 21–15

Runner-up

1967 Malaysia Open

Let’s Noco Esteeza

darmadi

Minarni Soedaryanto

15–9, 15–8

champion

see also

  • famous indonesian chinese
  • Indonesian Chinese
  • Asian Games
  • All England Open Badminton Championship

references

external link