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Herry vows to rearm Aaron-Wooi Yik for world conquest

Herry vows to rearm Aaron-Wooi Yik for world conquest

HERRY IP has proved in the past that he could bounce back spectacularly after a setback.
And the national men's doubles coach has vowed to do so again after Aaron Chia-Soh Wooi Yik's setback in the China Open final in Changzhou on Sunday.
Known as the "Fire Dragon" for his tenacity, Herry is rearming Aaron-Wooi Yik for the Paris World Championships on Aug 25–31.
Aaron-Wooi Yik are looking to Herry to reignite their game, like what he has done before.
Their careers hit rock bottom early this year when they crashed out in the All England first round.
Then Herry pulled the duo up again, guiding them to the Asian crown, Thailand Open and Singapore Open titles, and second place at the Malaysia Masters.
However, on Sunday, world No. 2 Aaron-Wooi Yik, who were eyeing their first Super 1000 title, were stunned 21-15, 21-14 by Indonesia's world No. 210 Fajar Alfian-Shohibul Fikri.
On the plane back from China, the Herry homework has begun. "I remain optimistic about preparing the players thoroughly for the World Championships, and we still have four weeks to go," said Herry.
"We will analyse and address Aaron-Wooi Yik's weaknesses and ensure they are well-prepared for the major event."
Herry said Aaron-Wooi Yik could not reprise the form that saw them destroy India's Asian Games champions Satwiksairaj Rankireddy-Chirag Shetty in the last four, as Fajar-Shohibul proved to be a different cup of tea.
"Aaron-Wooi Yik couldn't reproduce their semi-final form in the title match. They lost to Fajar-Shohibul in terms of strategy. Fajar-Shohibul were dominant, brave, and also calm in controlling the front court."
Herry, who is a legend in Indonesia for producing world and Olympic champions, will want to do the same for Malaysia in Paris.
A man who measures his success with trophies, Herry will be determined to help Aaron-Wooi Yik, the 2022 world champions, scale similar heights again.
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