Michał Łogosz
Polish badminton player (born 1977)
Badminton player
Michał Łogosz Birth name Michał Andrzej Łogosz Country Poland Born (1977-11-23 ) 23 November 1977 (age 47) Płock , PolandHeight 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in) Weight 80 kg (176 lb) Handedness Right Coach Rrszard Borek Event Men's doubles BWF profile
Michał Andrzej Łogosz (born 23 November 1977) is a Polish badminton player from Litpol-Malow Suwałki club.[ 1] He was named best sportsman in Płock in 1995.
Career
Łogosz started playing badminton when he was in primary school, and in 1992, he representing his club at the national league tournament. In 2000, he was selected to join the national team.[ 2]
Łogosz competed in badminton at the 2000 Summer Olympics and in 2004 Summer Olympics , both times in men's doubles with partner Robert Mateusiak . In 2000, they defeated David Bamford and Peter Blackburn of Australia in the first round, but lost in the round of 16 to Simon Archer and Nathan Robertson of United Kingdom . In 2004, they defeated Tri Kush Aryanto and Sigit Budiarto of Indonesia in the first round, before being defeated in the round of 16 by Kim Dong-moon and Ha Tae-kwon of Korea .[ 3]
Łogosz and Mateusiak won bronze medals at the European Championships in 2000 , 2002 , 2004 and 2006 .[ 4]
At the 2012 Summer Olympics , he competed with Adam Cwalina in the men's doubles, but was forced to retire from the event with an Achilles injury.[ 5]
Achievements
European Championships
Men's doubles
Year
Venue
Partner
Opponent
Score
Result
2000
Kelvin Hall International Sports Arena ,Glasgow , Scotland
Robert Mateusiak
Peter Axelsson Pär-Gunnar Jönsson
6–15, 15–10, 11–15
Bronze
2002
Baltiska hallen ,Malmö , Sweden
Robert Mateusiak
Jens Eriksen Martin Lundgaard Hansen
1–7, 6–8, 1–7
Bronze
2004
Queue d’Arve Sport Center,Geneva , Switzerland
Robert Mateusiak
Jens Eriksen Martin Lundgaard Hansen
9–15, 15–12, 6–15
Bronze
2006
Maaspoort Sports and Events ,Den Bosch , Netherlands
Robert Mateusiak
Jens Eriksen Martin Lundgaard Hansen
19–21, 21–23
Bronze
BWF Grand Prix
The BWF Grand Prix had two levels, the Grand Prix and Grand Prix Gold . It was a series of badminton tournaments sanctioned by the Badminton World Federation (BWF) and played between 2007 and 2017. The World Badminton Grand Prix was sanctioned by the International Badminton Federation from 1983 to 2006.
Men's doubles
BWF Grand Prix Gold tournament
BWF & IBF Grand Prix tournament
BWF International Challenge/Series/European Circuit
Men's doubles
Year
Tournament
Partner
Opponent
Score
Result
1997
Slovak International
Kamil Turonek
Harald Koch Jürgen Koch
9–15, 5–15
Runner-up
1998
Hungarian International
Robert Mateusiak
Joachim Fischer Nielsen Kasper Ødum
11–15, 15–8, 15–4
Winner
1999
French International
Robert Mateusiak
Anthony Clark Ian Sullivan
11–15, 10–15
Runner-up
2000
Dutch International
Robert Mateusiak
Mihail Popov Svetoslav Stoyanov
11–15, 15–9, 9–15
Runner-up
2000
Croatian International
Robert Mateusiak
Mihail Popov Svetoslav Stoyanov
17–16, 13–15, 15–12
Winner
2000
Victorian International
Robert Mateusiak
Dong Jiong Jiang Xin
15–10, 17–15
Winner
2001
Spanish International
Robert Mateusiak
José Antonio Crespo Sergio Llopis
15–3, 15–10
Winner
2001
Croatian International
Robert Mateusiak
Kristof Hopp Thomas Tesche
7–15, 13–15
Runner-up
2001
Austrian International
Robert Mateusiak
Mathias Boe Thomas Hovgaard
15–13, 15–3
Winner
2002
Portugal International
Robert Mateusiak
Peter Jeffrey Ian Palethorpe
8–7, 7–2, 7–3
Winner
2002
Polish International
Robert Mateusiak
Jesper Thomsen Tommy Sørensen
1–7, 7–3, 7–3, 3–7, 7–3
Winner
2002
Slovak International
Robert Mateusiak
Stanislav Pukhov Nikolai Zuyev
10–15, 15–8, 12–15
Runner-up
2003
Polish International
Robert Mateusiak
Imanuel Hirschfeld Jörgen Olsson
11–15, 15–2, 15–1
Winner
2003
Austrian International
Robert Mateusiak
Stanislav Pukhov Nikolay Zuev
15–6, 16–17, 15–11
Winner
2003
Scottish International
Robert Mateusiak
Vincent Laigle Svetoslav Stoyanov
15–5, 15–3
Winner
2003
Bitburger International
Robert Mateusiak
Vincent Laigle Svetoslav Stoyanov
15–5, 15–9
Winner
2004
Swedish International
Robert Mateusiak
Joachim Fischer Nielsen Jesper Larsen
4–15, 15–13, 15–12
Winner
2004
Polish International
Robert Mateusiak
Guo Zhendong Xie Zhongbo
15–8, 14–17, 14–17
Runner-up
2005
Finnish International
Robert Mateusiak
Henrik Andersson Fredrik Bergström
6–15, 12–15
Runner-up
2005
Polish International
Robert Mateusiak
Matthew Hughes Martyn Lewis
15–9, 15–7
Winner
2006
Polish International
Robert Mateusiak
Matthew Hughes Martyn Lewis
21–18, 21–17
Winner
2007
Bulgarian International
Robert Mateusiak
Erwin Kehlhoffner Svetoslav Stoyanov
Walkover
Winner
2008
Polish International
Robert Mateusiak
Adam Cwalina Wojciech Szkudlarczyk
21–16, 21–5
Winner
2008
White Nights
Robert Mateusiak
Vitalij Durkin Aleksandr Nikolaenko
21–6, 21–7
Winner
2010
White Nights
Adam Cwalina
Vitalij Durkin Alexander Nikolaenko
21–19, 29–27
Winner
2010
Kharkiv International
Adam Cwalina
Vladimir Ivanov Ivan Sozonov
28–26, 21–15
Winner
2010
Turkey International
Adam Cwalina
Vladimir Ivanov Ivan Sozonov
12–21, 18–21
Runner-up
2011
Polish Open
Adam Cwalina
Vladimir Ivanov Ivan Sozonov
21–23, 17–21
Runner-up
2011
Kharkiv International
Adam Cwalina
Vladimir Ivanov Ivan Sozonov
21–19, 19–21, 16–21
Runner-up
2011
Belgian International
Adam Cwalina
Jürgen Koch Peter Zauner
21–11, 21–15
Winner
2011
Brazil International
Adam Cwalina
Vladimir Ivanov Ivan Sozonov
21–16, 14–21, 22–24
Runner-up
2011
Czech International
Adam Cwalina
Vitalij Durkin Alexandr Nikolaenko
21–13, 21–16
Winner
2011
Norwegian International
Adam Cwalina
Rasmus Bonde Anders Kristiansen
17–21, 18–21
Runner-up
2011
Irish International
Adam Cwalina
Marcus Ellis Peter Mills
21–15, 21–15
Winner
2012
Polish Open
Adam Cwalina
Vladimir Ivanov Ivan Sozonov
11–21, 13–21
Runner-up
2013
Spanish Open
Łukasz Moreń
Adam Cwalina Przemysław Wacha
10–21, 21–18, 19–21
Runner-up
Mixed doubles
BWF International Challenge tournament
BWF International Series / European Circuit tournament
References
External links