Meet Team Ireland - Badminton

Nhat Nguyen and Rachael Darragh delighted to both make the grade for Paris

Nhat Nguyen: dug deep to climb the rankings and earn his second Olympic appearance. Photograph: David Fitzgerald/Sportsfile
Nhat Nguyen: dug deep to climb the rankings and earn his second Olympic appearance. Photograph: David Fitzgerald/Sportsfile
Nhat Nguyen

Age: 24

Event: Badminton

Previous Games: Tokyo 2020

Nguyen very firmly fell in to the ‘one to watch’ category when he earned his first Irish senior title at the age of just 15 and then, in 2016, became under-17 European champion. And he hadn’t even turned 20 when he qualified for his first Olympic Games, becoming just the fourth Irish person to achieve the feat in badminton when he made it to Tokyo. He’s had a tough time of it since, though, suffering a complete loss of confidence and form along the way, to the point where qualifying for Paris seemed unlikely. But he dug deep to climb the rankings and earn his second Olympic appearance.

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Rachael Darragh
Rachael Darragh: will maintain a fine family tradition in Paris. Her aunt Chloe Magee competed in three Olympic Games. Morgan Treacy/Inpho
Rachael Darragh: will maintain a fine family tradition in Paris. Her aunt Chloe Magee competed in three Olympic Games. Morgan Treacy/Inpho

Age: 26

Event: Badminton

Club: Raphoe Badminton Club

Previous Games: None

Darragh hails from Irish badminton royalty, her mother Naomi one of the Magee family who founded the renowned Raphoe Badminton Club in her home town in Donegal. Her aunt Chloe Magee competed in three Olympic Games and her uncle Dan Magee is the performance director for the Irish team. Darragh had an agonising wait to find out if she had qualified for Paris, describing herself as being in “the pits of despair”, but the good news finally came in May – she had taken the last available spot. She will, then, maintain a fine family tradition in Paris.

Mary Hannigan

Mary Hannigan

Mary Hannigan is a sports writer with The Irish Times