Leading the charge for the hosts at the HSBC BWF World Tour Finals 2023 in men’s doubles will be Liang Wei Keng/Wang Chang, who celebrated their ascension to the top of the World Rankings by winning the LI-NING China Masters 2023.
The other pair that the hosts will look up to are defending champions Liu Yu Chen/Ou Xuan Yi. Having won the event twice (in 2018 with Li Jun Hui), Liu Yu Chen can bank on his rich experience at the season finale.
The only other pair to have won this title are Takuro Hoki/Yugo Kobayashi, winners in 2021, the year that they won the BWF World Championships.
Of the other five pairs in contention, there are two world champions (reigning champions Seo Seung Jae/Kang Min Hyuk and 2022 winners Aaron Chia/Soh Wooi Yik); two All England champions (2023 winners Fajar Alfian/Muhammad Rian Ardianto and 2022 champions Muhammad Shohibul Fikri/Bagas Maulana) and this year’s World Championships silver medallists Kim Astrup/Anders Skaarup Rasmussen.
Here is an overview of this season’s performances of the eight pairs:
Liang Wei Keng/Wang Chang (China)
With Wang’s guile and Liang’s power, the Chinese combo emerged on top of the world, winning four titles from six finals.
Fajar Alfian/Muhammad Rian Ardianto (Indonesia)
The PETRONAS Malaysia Open and YONEX All England wins studded their resume this year, but the Indonesians were sometimes off the boil and will look to get more consistent.
Kang Min Hyuk/Seo Seung Jae (Korea)
Didn’t have high profile titles to boast of, but their World Championships victory changed everything, and rode on that confidence to win a title in Australia.
Aaron Chia/Soh Wooi Yik (Malaysia)
Finally put an end to questions on their lack of title success on the World Tour as they won the VICTOR Denmark Open – after falling in three finals earlier in the year.
Takuro Hoki/Yugo Kobayashi (Japan)
The 2021 world champions were mostly consistent through the season, with their high points being the KFF Singapore Open win and back-to-back finals in Japan and Australia.
Kim Astrup/Anders Skaarup Rasmussen (Denmark)
Their dramatic improvement in the second half of the season saw them make a sensational run into the World Championships final at home, after which they won three World Tour titles from four events.
Liu Yu Chen/Ou Xuan Yi (China)
Had a modest year by their standards but found form late in the year, with back-to-back finals in Saarbrucken and Kumamoto.
Muhammad Shohibul Fikri/Bagas Maulana (Indonesia)
Their surge into the top eight, vaulting over other strong Indonesian pairs, was helped by two peaks in the year, when they made successive finals in Orleans and Bangkok, and later in Denmark and France.