Low Zi Yu-Noraqilah Maisarah Ramdan pulled off a huge upset against world No 7 duo Rin Iwanaga-Kie Nakanishi in the final Group B match of the Uber Cup Finals 2026 between Malaysia and Japan recently. At 19-16 down in the decider, they were not supposed to believe. Not against the world No 7 pair. Not on a stage this big. Not at 15 and 18.
But belief, it turned out, did
not care about rankings. On a tense night at the Uber Cup, Malaysia may have
lost the tie but in those final, breathless moments, something far more
significant took shape.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org
Low Zi Yu and Noraqilah Maisarah Ramdan arrived as underdogs, ranked No 143 in the world and playing on a stage that typically belongs to experience. Across the net stood Japan’s world No 7 pairing of Rin Iwanaga and Kie Nakanishi: established, composed, expected to deliver.
The script was clear. Until it wasn’t. Zi Yu, tall and steady beyond her 15 years, and the pint-sized but fearless 18-year-old Noraqilah refused to follow it. They took the opening game 21-17, lost the second 12-21, and found themselves staring at defeat at 19-16 in the decider. That was where the match should have ended. Instead, it sharpened.
One point. Then another. Then another. Five straight points. A 21-19 victory that did more than secure Malaysia’s only point of the tie. It altered the mood of it.
There was no wild celebration, no sense of disbelief. Just a composure that suggested they had expected themselves to find a way. But for a pair stepping into their first major team competition, it was enough. They had just beaten a top-10 pair on one of badminton’s biggest stages, and were already thinking about what comes next. Malaysia would go on to lose the Group B tie 4-1 to three-time champions Japan. But even within that result were signs of resistance.
Two teenagers, playing without fear, had offered a glimpse of what lies ahead. At 19-16 down, they did not look at the scoreboard. They played the next point. Then the next. And somewhere in that surge, Malaysian sport saw what it might become. I dare say this is what Malaysia could become! And there was no race or religion, no special privileges, just two fighters on the field of battle, looking out for each other as one. That’s the spirit of the new Malaysia we always dream about!
Reference:
At 19-16 down, Malaysia’s
badminton future refused to wait, Frankie D’Cruz, FMT, 28 April 2026










