BAM appoints Herry Iman Pierngadi as new men’s doubles head coach

Badminton Association of Malaysia made the announcement today, Herry will begin his tenure on February 1

1:51 PM MYT

 

KUALA LUMPUR — The Badminton Association of Malaysia (BAM) has officially named Indonesian badminton legend Herry Iman Pierngadi as the new national men’s doubles head coach.

Herry, well-known for guiding Candra Wijaya and Tony Gunawan (2000 Sydney) and Hendra Setiawan and Markis Kido (2008 Beijing) to Olympic glory, will replace Tan Bin Shen, who is set to join the Hong Kong national team next month.

This confirms Scoop’s report yesterday that BAM would appoint an Indonesian to succeed Tan Bin Shen. 

Herry IP had emerged as the strongest contender among other notable names, including Flandy Limpele and Paulus Firman, following his recent departure from the Indonesian Badminton Association (PBSI).

“BAM is pleased to announce the appointment of Indonesian doubles legend Herry Iman Pierngadi as the new national men’s doubles head coach. 

“Herry has an illustrious record, having coached Olympic champions Candra Wijaya and Tony Gunawan (Sydney 2000) and Hendra Setiawan and Markis Kido (Beijing 2008).

“Herry will officially begin his tenure with BAM on February 1, 2025,” read a statement issued by BAM today.

One of Herry’s primary objectives will be to inspire Malaysia’s top men’s doubles duo, Aaron Chia and Soh Wooi Yik, to a historic gold medal at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. — January 11, 2025

Topics

 

Popular

DBKL slices up Havoc Food Festival in Setapak as traffic complaints boil over

Nik Nazmi steps in after residents complain of congestion, authorities shut down unlicensed event

In latest book ‘Saving the Planet’, Nik Nazmi makes urgent call for climate action

New book offers a Malaysian perspective on the global environmental crisis, highlighting economic and social stakes of climate change

Sports budget allocation: is popularity winning over performance in 2025 funding?

As RM15 million goes to football and RM20 million to e-sports, critics question whether funding priorities reflect merit or strong networks in Malaysian sports

Related