Hina Hayata

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Hina Hayata Table tennis player
Hina Hayata
Hina Hayata at the German Open 2017
Other spellings: 早 田 ひ な
Nation: JapanJapan Japan
Date of birth: July 7, 2000
Playing hand: Left
How to play: Shakehand (attack)
Best world ranking : 11 (Jan. 2018)

Hina Hayata ( Japanese 早 田 ひ な , Hayata Hina ; born July 7, 2000 ) is a Japanese table tennis player . In doubles with Yui Hamamoto (2016) and Mima Itō (from 2017), she won gold at the 2016 Grand Finals , silver at the 2017 Grand Finals and the 2019 World Cup and bronze at the 2017 World Cup . She uses the shakehand style to hold the bat . At the age of 17, she reached number 11 in the world rankings in January 2018 .

Career

Hina started playing table tennis at the age of four. She was sponsored by the Japanese table tennis association because she had talent at an early age . She is left-handed who can unsettle many opponents with her variable game. In 2014 she was allowed to play internationally for the first time, at the Chile Open she reached the individual finals and thus won her first medal on the World Tour , and she also made it to the quarter-finals of the Asian Youth Championship. In the world rankings she entered the top 100 in May 2014. In 2015, her activity increased significantly, she took part in a total of 11 World Tour tournaments, in addition to numerous medal placements in the U-21 competitions, she won silver in doubles with Hitomi Satō at the Korea Open. In May she was ranked 50th in the world for the first time. In 2016 she started in 12 tournaments on the World Tour, winning gold for the first time in the U-21 competition of the Kuwait Open, followed by a gold medal in the singles at the Australian Open . With silver in doubles (with Miyu Katō ) and in mixed as well as gold in the team, she reached three more podium finishes at the World Youth Championship. At the end of the year she was also able to start at the Grand Finals , where she was eliminated in singles against Cheng I-Ching , but won gold in doubles with Yui Hamamoto and in the U-21 competition.

In 2017 she competed at the Asian and World Championships , in doubles with Mima Itō she won the bronze medal. On the World Tour she only took part in the adult competitions from 2017 and qualified through continued great activity - she played ten of twelve tournaments and won gold in doubles three times - again for the Grand Finals . In the singles she was defeated in the first round by the reigning World Cup winner Zhu Yuling just 3: 4, in doubles she came to the final with Mima Itō, where she lost against the vice-world champions Chen Meng / Zhu Yuling. At her first team World Cup in 2018 , she won silver with the Japanese team. At the 2019 World Cup , she could only start in doubles, with Mima Itō she won silver. At the Japanese Championship 2019 she won the singles title after beating Kasumi Ishikawa in the final .

Double partners

Hina played with different partners in different years. Listed only for at least three joint tournaments per year:

Results from the ITTF database (excerpt)

Mention of results of the World Tour / Challenge Series only if at least one medal has been won.

Association event year place country singles Double Mixed team U-21
JPN Asian Championship 2017 Wuxi China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China last 16 Semifinals silver
JPN ITTF Challenge Series 2019 Minsk BelarusBelarus gold
JPN ITTF Challenge Series 2019 Asunción ParaguayParaguay gold
JPN ITTF Challenge Series 2019 Belgrade SerbiaSerbia gold
JPN ITTF Challenge Series 2019 Muscat OmanOman gold
JPN ITTF Challenge Series 2019 Lisbon PortugalPortugal gold
JPN ITTF Challenge Series 2017 Almeria SpainSpain gold
JPN ITTF World Tour 2019 Linz AustriaAustria Quarter finals gold
JPN ITTF World Tour 2019 Sapporo JapanJapan last 32 silver
JPN ITTF World Tour 2019 Doha QatarQatar Agony Semifinals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2018 Linz AustriaAustria last 32 gold
JPN ITTF World Tour 2018 Olomouc Czech RepublicCzech Republic last 32 Semifinals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2018 Panagyurishte BulgariaBulgaria last 32 Semifinals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2018 Geelong AustraliaAustralia last 32 gold
JPN ITTF World Tour 2018 Shenzhen China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China last 16 Semifinals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2018 Hong Kong Hong KongHong Kong last 32 Semifinals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2018 Bremen GermanyGermany last 32 gold
JPN ITTF World Tour 2017 Stockholm SwedenSweden last 16 gold
JPN ITTF World Tour 2017 Magdeburg GermanyGermany last 16 gold
JPN ITTF World Tour 2017 Olomouc Czech RepublicCzech Republic Quarter finals gold
JPN ITTF World Tour 2017 Gold coast AustraliaAustralia last 16 Semifinals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2017 Incheon Korea SouthSouth Korea Quarter finals silver
JPN ITTF World Tour 2016 Linz AustriaAustria last 32 silver
JPN ITTF World Tour 2016 Incheon Korea SouthSouth Korea Quarter finals last 16 Semifinals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2016 Tokyo JapanJapan Quarter finals Quarter finals Semifinals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2016 Melbourne AustraliaAustralia gold
JPN ITTF World Tour 2016 Warsaw PolandPoland last 16 Semifinals Quarter finals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2016 Doha QatarQatar Agony silver
JPN ITTF World Tour 2016 Kuwait City KuwaitKuwait Agony gold
JPN ITTF World Tour 2016 Berlin GermanyGermany Agony silver
JPN ITTF World Tour 2016 Budapest HungaryHungary last 64 Agony silver
JPN ITTF World Tour 2015 Stockholm SwedenSweden Agony last 16 Semifinals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2015 catfish AustriaAustria last 32 Semifinals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2015 Olomouc Czech RepublicCzech Republic last 64 Semifinals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2015 Incheon Korea SouthSouth Korea last 32 silver Quarter finals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2015 Gold coast AustraliaAustralia last 32 silver
JPN ITTF World Tour 2015 Subic Bay PhilippinesPhilippines Quarter finals silver
JPN ITTF World Tour 2015 Bremen GermanyGermany Agony silver
JPN ITTF World Tour 2014 Ekaterinburg RussiaRussia Semifinals Quarter finals
JPN ITTF World Tour 2014 Subic Bay PhilippinesPhilippines Semifinals last 16
JPN ITTF World Tour 2014 Santiago de Chile ChileChile silver Quarter finals
JPN ITTF World Tour Grand Finals 2018 Incheon Korea SouthSouth Korea gold
JPN ITTF World Tour Grand Finals 2017 Astana KazakhstanKazakhstan last 16 silver
JPN ITTF World Tour Grand Finals 2016 Doha QatarQatar last 16 gold gold
JPN World Championship 2019 Budapest HungaryHungary silver
JPN World Championship 2018 Halmstad SwedenSweden silver
JPN World Championship 2017 Dusseldorf GermanyGermany Semifinals
JPN Youth Asian Championship 2015 Kuala Lumpur MalaysiaMalaysia last 16
JPN Youth Asian Championship 2014 Mumbai IndiaIndia Quarter finals
JPN Youth World Championship 2016 Cape Town South AfricaSouth Africa last 32 silver silver gold

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b player profile. ittf.com, accessed March 14, 2018 .
  2. Ma Long gets the triple! Gold for China duo in doubles. mytischtennis.de, April 28, 2019, accessed on January 18, 2020 .
  3. Uda and Hayata are the new Japanese masters! mytischtennis.de, January 20, 2020, accessed on January 24, 2020 .
  4. Matches. ittf.com, accessed March 14, 2018 .