Results

World Championships Women 08/27 16:25 5 Thuy Linh Nguyen v Kirsty Gilmour L 2-0
World Championships Women 08/25 09:10 6 Fadilah Shamika Mohamed Rafi v Kirsty Gilmour W 0-2
China Open Women 07/23 07:35 5 Unnati Hooda v Kirsty Gilmour L 2-0
Japan Open Women 07/16 03:35 5 Kirsty Gilmour v Tomoka Miyazaki L 0-2
Indonesia Open Women 06/05 13:10 - Kirsty Gilmour v Zhi Yi Wang L 1-2
Indonesia Open Women 06/04 13:35 5 Kirsty Gilmour v Jin Wei Goh W 2-0
Singapore Open Women 05/28 02:00 5 Ratchanok Intanon v Kirsty Gilmour L 2-0
European Championships Women 04/13 17:10 1 Line H Kjaersfeldt v Kirsty Gilmour L 2-0
European Championships Women 04/12 14:55 2 Kirsty Gilmour v Vivien Sandorhazi W 2-0
European Championships Women 04/11 12:50 3 Yvonne Li v Kirsty Gilmour W 1-2
European Championships Women 04/10 11:40 4 Clara Lassaux v Kirsty Gilmour W 0-2
European Championships Women 04/09 13:50 5 Freya Redfearn v Kirsty Gilmour W 0-2

Wikipedia - Kirsty Gilmour

Kirsty Gilmour (born 21 September 1993) is a Scottish badminton player who has represented both Scotland and Great Britain.

History

Gilmour won the silver medal at the 2014 Commonwealth Games, losing out to Michelle Li of Canada in the final and becoming the first Scottish player to reach the women's singles finals at the Commonwealth Games. She jointly won Scottish Young Sports Personality of the Year 2012 with swimmer Craig Benson.

On 1 May 2016, Gilmour went down fighting to Carolina Marín, in the finals of the European Championship held in La Roche-sur-Yon, settling for the silver medal.

Making a second appearance at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Gilmour, the eleventh seed, won her opening match against the unseeded Sabrina Jaquet in straight games. However, she lost her second match against the world No. 28 Linda Zetchiri 21–12, 17–21, 16–21, thereby making an exit at the group stage.

In 2017, she made it back into the final round of the European Championship in Kolding, Denmark but her pace was stopped by defending champion Carolina Marín with score 14–21, 12–21. Gilmour earned a silver medal.

Gilmour represented Great Britain at the delayed 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, going out in the group stages after defeating Mahoor Shahzad of Azerbaijan but losing to Japanese fourth seed Akane Yamaguchi.

At the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, she again went out in the group stages after winning her opening match against Keisha Fatimah Az Zahra from Azerbaijan then losing to China's number six seed He Bingjiao.