Tokyo target for guardian Gabby Adcock as badminton funding boost reflects growing medal haul

Tokyo target: Badminton star Gabby Adcock. Picture: Alex Morton/Getty ImagesTokyo target: Badminton star Gabby Adcock. Picture: Alex Morton/Getty Images
Tokyo target: Badminton star Gabby Adcock. Picture: Alex Morton/Getty Images
LEEDS badminton star Gabby Adcock could not hide her disappointment when her sport was stripped of crucial funding in December, 2016, despite Chris Langridge and Marcus Ellis taking a Rio Olympics men’s doubles bronze.

Adcock vowed that the show would go on and went on to star at the European Championships five months later, taking gold alongside husband Chris in the mixed doubles as part of stellar haul for Team GB.

“We are all starting to come into our prime. That’s the frustrating thing,” said the Garforth-schooled star following her gold at the 2017 Europeans.

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Nearly two years on, those words have proved well founded with Adcock since adding further Commonwealth and European golds to her collection plus a World Championships bronze in Glasgow.

Chris and Gabby Adcock celebrate winning their mixed doubles quarter final match at the 2017 World Championships in Glasgow. Picture: Jane Barlow/PAChris and Gabby Adcock celebrate winning their mixed doubles quarter final match at the 2017 World Championships in Glasgow. Picture: Jane Barlow/PA
Chris and Gabby Adcock celebrate winning their mixed doubles quarter final match at the 2017 World Championships in Glasgow. Picture: Jane Barlow/PA

The latter prompted a UK Sport U-turn with Adcock now targeting a maiden Olympics medal at Tokyo 2020 next year and proud her efforts have put British badminton on a stronger financial footing for the long term.

Adcock and the rest of the GB contingent were left rocked when UK Sport cut the funding from £5.9m per Olympic cycle to nothing.

That, though, failed to stop the medal haul and six months after Glasgow, UK Sport announced they would be investing £630,000 for the remaining period of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic cycle from the new ‘Medal Support Plan’.

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