Gergely Krausz

{{short description|Hungarian badminton player (born 1993)}}

{{Hungarian name|Krausz Gergely}}

{{Infobox badminton player

| name = Gergely Krausz

| image =

| image_size =

| caption =

| birth_name =

| country = Hungary

| birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1993|12|25}}

| birth_place = Mór, Hungary

| residence =

| height = 1.88 m

| weight = 76 kg

| retired = 17 October 2021

| years_active =

| handedness =

| coach =

| event = Men's singles & doubles

| highest_ranking = 81 (MS 10 May 2018)
113 (MD 25 August 2016)
134 (XD 17 July 2014)

| date_of_highest_ranking =

| current_ranking =

| date_of_current_ranking =

| medal_templates =

| bwfbadminton_id = 56755

| bwf_id = C21B8D34-FBF8-41E6-BE3C-49667A895A90

}}

Gergely Krausz (born 25 December 1993) is a Hungarian badminton player affiliated with Multi Alarm SE.{{cite web |title=Players: Gergely Krausz |url=http://bwfbadminton.com/player/56755/gergely-krausz |website=Badminton World Federation |access-date=28 October 2016}} He competed at the 2015 and 2019 European Games. Krausz is the first ever Hungarian men's singles player to participate at the Olympics by competing at the 2020 Tokyo Games. He retired from the international badminton on 17 October 2021.{{cite web |title=Visszavonult Krausz Gergely |url=http://www.atv.hu/belfold/20211017-visszavonult-krausz-gergely |website=BATV |date=17 October 2021 |access-date=6 November 2021 |language=hu |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211017163614/http://www.atv.hu/belfold/20211017-visszavonult-krausz-gergely |archive-date=17 October 2021}}

Achievements

= BWF International Challenge/Series (2 titles, 3 runners-up) =

Men's singles

class="sortable wikitable" style="font-size: 90%;"

! Year

! Tournament

! Opponent

! Score

! Result

style="background:#D5D5D5"

| align="center" | 2016

| align="left" | Turkey International

| align="left" | {{flagicon|DEN}} Patrick Bjerregaard

| align="left" | 19–21, 16–21

| style="text-align:left; background:white" | {{silver2}} Runner-up

style="background:#D5D5D5"

| align="center" | 2018

| align="left" | Egypt International

| align="left" | {{flagicon|AZE}} Ade Resky Dwicahyo

| align="left" | 16–21, 16–21

| style="text-align:left; background:white" | {{silver2}} Runner-up

style="background:#D5D5D5"

| align="center" | 2020

| align="left" | Uganda International

| align="left" | {{flagicon|SRI}} Niluka Karunaratne

| align="left" | 21–18, 18–21, 21–13

| style="text-align:left; background:white" | {{gold1}} Winner

Men's doubles

class="sortable wikitable" style="font-size: 90%;"

! Year

! Tournament

! Partner

! Opponent

! Score

! Result

style="background:#D8CEF6"

| align="center" | 2014

| align="left" | Turkey International

| align="left" | {{flagicon|THA}} Karnphop Atthaviroj

| align="left" | {{flagicon|RUS}} Konstantin Abramov
{{flagicon|RUS}} Alexandr Zinchenko

| align="left" | 17–21, 15–21

| style="text-align:left; background:white" | {{silver2}} Runner-up

style="background:#D5D5D5"

| align="center" | 2015

| align="left" | Turkey International

| align="left" | {{flagicon|THA}} Samatcha Tovannakasem

| align="left" | {{flagicon|IRN}} Ashkan Fesahati
{{flagicon|IRN}} Mohamad Reza Khanjani

| align="left" | 21–6, 21–6

| style="text-align:left; background:white" | {{gold1}} Winner

: {{Color box|#D8CEF6|border=darkgray}} BWF International Challenge tournament

: {{Color box|#D5D5D5|border=darkgray}} BWF International Series tournament

: {{Color box|#E9E9E9|border=darkgray}} BWF Future Series tournament

References

{{Reflist}}