Gail Emms
Gail Elizabeth Emms MBE (born 23 July 1977) is a retired English badminton player who specialized in mixed doubles and achieved international prominence through her partnership with Nathan Robertson.[1][2]
Emms and Robertson won a silver medal in mixed doubles at the 2004 Athens Olympics, marking Great Britain's first Olympic medal in badminton, after a closely contested final against China's Zhang Ning and Gao Ling.[3][4]
The pair later claimed gold at the 2006 World Badminton Championships in Madrid, solidifying Emms' status as one of Britain's most successful badminton athletes.[5][6]
Emms was awarded the Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) for her contributions to the sport.[7]
Early Life and Introduction to Badminton
Childhood and Family Influences
Gail Emms was born on 23 July 1977 in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, England, into a family that prioritized physical activity and discipline. Her mother, Janice Emms, exerted a profound early influence as a trailblazing female footballer who represented England in the 1971 unofficial Women's World Cup, modeling resilience and athletic commitment during an era when women's football faced institutional barriers. This familial emphasis on sports extended to recreational play, with Emms recalling her initial exposure to badminton around age two, when she collected shuttlecocks during family sessions on local courts.[8][9][10] Emms formally took up badminton at age four, motivated primarily by enjoyment and the sport's availability through community facilities in Hitchin rather than any precocious talent or structured ambition. Her parents' encouragement, amid a household managing three young children while her father frequently traveled for work, fostered an environment where badminton served as accessible recreation, distinct from her mother's competitive football background. This casual entry, without early pressure for elite performance, aligned with the practical realities of local club access in 1980s Hertfordshire, where shuttle sports were promoted for youth fitness.[7][9][5][11]Initial Training and First Competitions
Gail Emms began playing badminton at the age of four in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, initially through local club sessions that emphasized basic skills and competitive play.[12] By age seven, she won a tournament restricted to 11-year-olds, demonstrating early competitive edge in matches requiring quick reflexes and court coverage.[13] Her development progressed through county-level competitions in Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire during the late 1980s and early 1990s, where she honed doubles play, leveraging agility suited to net and rear-court positioning in partnerships.[14] From ages 10 to 16, Emms trained under coach Bill Goode, who managed groups of up to 20 young players and focused on technical fundamentals like stroke precision and footwork drills, fostering her transition from singles to specialized doubles training.[14] This period included intensive local and regional fixtures, building match experience against peers in structured leagues that prioritized endurance and tactical awareness over raw power.[15] Emms achieved her first international junior milestones in 1994, securing a bronze medal in mixed doubles at the World Junior Championships in Kuala Lumpur alongside Nathan Robertson, after advancing through preliminary rounds with consistent wins in group stages.[16] She followed this with two bronze medals at the European Junior Championships, including a third-place finish in girls' doubles, reflecting disciplined preparation in training camps that stressed partnership synchronization and error minimization in high-stakes ties.[16] In 1995, Emms earned her initial selection to represent England, debuting in an international fixture against China, marking the culmination of her junior pathway from club novice to national prospect through verifiable progression in county rankings and scouting evaluations.[17][15]Professional Badminton Career
Early National and International Breakthroughs
Emms debuted on the senior international stage in 1995, representing England in a match against China, which marked her initial breakthrough into national team selection at age 18.[17] This early exposure highlighted her potential in doubles disciplines, prompting a strategic shift from singles to prioritize women's and mixed doubles, where her tactical agility and court coverage proved advantageous over power-based play.[7] Domestically, Emms secured multiple English National women's doubles titles during the late 1990s, partnering with players including Jo Wright and Natalie Munt, establishing her as a consistent performer and earning repeated selections for senior events.[18] These victories, achieved through refined net play and defensive positioning, propelled her rankings within the national circuit and facilitated entry into International Badminton Federation (IBF) tournaments, where she competed against emerging global competition.[17] By early 2001, Emms demonstrated international progress in mixed doubles alongside Ian Sullivan, attaining a world ranking of seventh with 1,538 points accumulated from prior results, reflecting incremental gains in consistency and partnership synergy prior to her later collaborations.[19] This ranking positioned her for initial World Championships qualification considerations, underscoring her ascent amid a field dominated by Asian pairs, though specific medal hauls remained elusive at this stage.[7]Partnership with Nathan Robertson
Gail Emms and Nathan Robertson formed their senior mixed doubles partnership in the early 2000s, building on prior collaboration at junior level from ages 15 to 18.[20] By 2002, they entered major events as top seeds, such as the Commonwealth Games, demonstrating early competitive positioning despite a quarter-final exit there.[21] Their on-court synergy relied on complementary styles, with Emms emphasizing agile net control and interceptions while Robertson provided rear-court dominance through powerful drives and smashes, fostering a telepathic understanding honed over years.[22] Training emphasized rigorous preparation for tactical execution, including competitive practice sessions where Robertson's intensity extended to intra-pair matches, ensuring sharpness in rotation and positioning.[23] This approach yielded empirical success, including ascent to world number one ranking in 2003 and a gold medal at the 2004 European Championships in Geneva, where they defeated Danish pairs in the final to claim the title.[24] Their pre-Olympic record highlighted consistent advancement in Superseries events, underscoring effective partnership dynamics without specific win rates publicly detailed in contemporary reports.[24]2004 Athens Olympics Performance
Gail Emms and Nathan Robertson, seeded fourth in the mixed doubles event, advanced through the group stage and knockout rounds to reach the final.[25] Their path included a decisive victory over Germany's Björn Siegemund and Nicole Ptak (née Pitro) by 15–11, 15–4 on August 15, 2004, showcasing Robertson's powerful smashes and Emms's effective net control.[26] The British pair's preparation emphasized rigorous training to counter top-seeded opponents, contributing to their progression despite facing stronger continental rivals.[5] In the final on August 19, 2004, against China's top seeds Zhang Jun and Gao Ling, Emms and Robertson lost 1–15, 15–12, 12–15. The first game saw China dominate with Zhang's overhead smashes and Gao's precise net play, limiting Britain to one point in just 12 minutes.[25] Emms and Robertson adjusted tactics in the second game, adopting a more aggressive approach that leveled the match at 15–12 after saving a game point. The third game remained close, with Britain briefly leading but ultimately falling short; China employed gamesmanship, including frequent line call disputes and delays, while the British duo saved two match points before conceding on the third.[25][27] The silver medal marked Great Britain's best performance in Olympic badminton at the time, with Emms and Robertson receiving recognition including Emms's MBE in the 2009 Queen's Birthday Honours for services to the sport.[28] Their near-upset highlighted the effectiveness of their partnership's complementary styles—Robertson's height and power paired with Emms's agility—but underscored the Chinese pair's superior experience and tactical adaptability under pressure.[25]2006 Commonwealth Games Results
At the 2006 Commonwealth Games held in Melbourne, Australia, from March 15 to 26, Gail Emms partnered with Nathan Robertson in mixed doubles, securing the gold medal for England. They defeated New Zealand's Daniel Shirley and Sara Runesten-Petersen in the final with scores of 21–17 and 21–10.[29] Earlier in the tournament, the pair overcame a first-game loss of 19–21 to Singapore's Hendri Saputra and Li Yujia in the semifinals before winning the subsequent games to advance.[30] Their initial match resulted in a straight-sets victory over Malaysia's Wong Choony Hann and Ooi Stock Ai.[31] This triumph contributed to England's badminton achievements, which included two golds alongside Tracey Hallam's women's singles victory, bolstering the nation's overall tally of 36 gold medals.[32] In women's doubles, Emms teamed with Donna Kellogg to earn bronze. They were eliminated in the semifinals by Singapore's Jiang Yanmei and Li Yujia, preventing a final appearance against Malaysia's gold-winning pair Chin Eei Hui and Wong Pei Tty.[33] The English duo had progressed convincingly in prior rounds, including a 21–12, 21–16 quarterfinal win.[34] This medal rounded out England's mixed team silver and individual successes in badminton at the event.[33] Emms' performances demonstrated resilience following the 2004 Olympics, with no reported injuries impeding her play during the Games.[35]2008 Beijing Olympics and Career Peak
Emms and her long-time partner Nathan Robertson entered the 2008 Beijing Olympics as seasoned contenders in mixed doubles badminton, buoyed by their status as former world number one pair from 2005 to 2006 and recent victories including the 2006 World Championships gold.[17] Expectations were elevated post their 2006 Commonwealth Games gold, positioning them to challenge for a medal in what would serve as their final major international appearance. In the round of 16, the British duo staged a dramatic comeback against the world number two seeds, China's Zheng Bo and Gao Ling— their opponents from the 2004 Athens final—winning 16-21, 21-16, 21-19 after trailing significantly in the decider.[36] [37] Their campaign concluded in the quarterfinals with a 19-21, 12-21 defeat to South Korea's Lee Yong-dae and Lee Hyo-jung, who went on to claim the gold medal.[38] At age 31, Emms faced the physical toll of elite badminton's demands, where sustained high-intensity rallies favor younger athletes with fresher recovery capabilities.[4] The event underscored the era's escalating competitive depth, driven by intensified investments in Asian powerhouses like China and South Korea, which produced multiple top-tier pairs capable of exploiting any lapses in consistency or stamina.[39] This Olympic exit represented the apex and denouement of Emms' career trajectory, capping a decade of dominance in mixed doubles with peak world rankings and major titles, yet highlighting the sport's unforgiving progression where even top performers contend with finite physiological peaks amid global field expansion. Empirical records show their 2006-2008 form remained elite, evidenced by consistent semifinal-plus finishes in superseries events, but Beijing's results empirically validated the challenges of sustaining medal contention against rejuvenated rivals.[17][40]Additional Titles and Tournaments
Emms secured gold in mixed doubles at the 2004 European Badminton Championships in Geneva, partnering Nathan Robertson.[17] She also claimed gold in women's doubles at the 2006 European Badminton Championships with Donna Kellogg.[41] At the senior World Badminton Championships, Emms and Robertson won gold in mixed doubles in 2006 in Madrid, defeating Denmark's Thomas Laybourn and Kamilla Rytter Juhl in the final.[42] In BWF Superseries events, Emms and Robertson triumphed at the 2005 All England Open in mixed doubles, overcoming Denmark's Laybourn and Rytter Juhl.[17] This victory contributed to her ascent to the world No. 1 ranking in mixed doubles, which she held for 18 weeks between 2005 and 2006.[43][17] Earlier in her career, Emms earned a bronze medal in mixed doubles at the 1994 World Junior Championships in Kuala Lumpur and another bronze at the 1995 European Junior Championships in Nitra.[44] Domestically, she captured five English National Championships titles in mixed doubles and six in women's doubles.[45] Across her professional tenure, Emms amassed 22 individual titles, reflecting consistent performance in international circuits.[43]Retirement from Professional Badminton
Decision and Immediate Aftermath
Gail Emms announced her intention to retire from professional badminton following the 2008 Beijing Olympics in June 2007, citing her age of 31 and a desire to exit the sport at the peak of her career after two decades of elite competition.[46] This decision was influenced by the cumulative physical demands of the sport, including intensive training and global travel since starting at age four, which had spanned 27 years by 2008.[47] Emms expressed satisfaction with her achievements, including the 2004 Olympic silver medal and world championship title, but noted a waning motivation to continue amid the relentless schedule.[48] The Beijing Olympics marked her final competitive appearance, where she and partner Nathan Robertson suffered a quarter-final defeat to South Korea's Lee Hyo-jung and Lee Yong-dae on August 15, 2008, confirming her retirement amid visible emotion during post-match interviews.[49] Emms later reflected that the full implications of retirement would not register until returning home, emphasizing no immediate plans beyond ruling out coaching due to burnout from her playing career.[50] In the immediate aftermath, Emms engaged in short-term media appearances, including a BBC interview on October 27, 2008, where she described enjoying early retirement leisure after the Olympic exit, focusing on rest without structured commitments.[51] No formal handover to younger players was publicly detailed, though her departure aligned with UK badminton's transition to emerging talents amid performance-based funding adjustments post-Olympics.[52]Transition Challenges in Elite Sport
Following her retirement from professional badminton in September 2008, Gail Emms encountered profound difficulties in adjusting to life without the structured demands of elite competition, describing a sudden void in purpose and daily routine that left her feeling directionless.[52] She articulated this as a complete loss of self, stating, "I lost my identity in badminton. I lost me," highlighting how her sense of worth had been inextricably tied to athletic performance and achievement.[52] The abrupt shift from intense training regimens—often exceeding 30 hours weekly—and international travel to unstructured civilian existence exacerbated early emotional distress, manifesting in episodes of grief and disorientation linked directly to the absence of competitive goals.[5] Emms noted that this achievement vacuum triggered a mental battle, as the adrenaline and validation from high-stakes events evaporated overnight, leaving her grappling with an unfamiliar lack of external validation.[53] Emms's attempts to secure employment underscored personal hurdles in re-entering the workforce, with repeated rejections amplifying her sense of failure despite her Olympic silver medal from Athens 2004 and world championship title in 2006.[54] She applied for numerous roles but faced consistent setbacks, including not advancing to interviews, which she described as evoking "all my demons" and reinforcing feelings of inadequacy rooted in her athlete's ego.[55] Financial pressures mounted as she resorted to selling personal possessions online to cover bills, contemplating low-wage jobs such as barista work at Starbucks to provide for her family.[56] These experiences illustrated the gap between elite athletic credentials and civilian employability, where transferable skills like discipline and resilience were undervalued by employers unfamiliar with sports-specific contexts.[57] Systemically, Emms's transition reflected broader challenges in British elite sport, particularly UK Sport's "no compromise" funding model, which prioritized medal-contending pathways and de-emphasized doubles programs perceived as lower-yield investments.[52] Although her retirement predated major badminton funding reductions—from £7.4 million post-London 2012 to zero for Tokyo 2020—the model's emphasis on singles over doubles during her era limited program depth and post-career support networks, leaving athletes like Emms without robust transition infrastructure.[58] She criticized this "Simon Cowell approach," arguing it rewarded predictability over holistic development, contributing to a precarious ecosystem where non-podium athletes faced abrupt defunding and isolation upon exiting.[52] This funding philosophy, while driving Olympic success, fostered an environment of disposability, where doubles specialists—Emms's domain—received inconsistent backing, hindering long-term career sustainability and reintegration.[59]Post-Retirement Struggles and Recovery
Mental Health and Financial Difficulties
Following her 2008 retirement from professional badminton, Emms endured recurrent bouts of depression linked to the abrupt loss of her athletic identity and the unstructured demands of post-sport life, which she described as leaving her feeling like a "failure."[57] These episodes intensified around 2017, when she publicly admitted that job rejections—despite her Olympic pedigree—revived deep-seated insecurities, prompting her to seek therapy amid emotional distress that included frequent crying and self-doubt.[60][52] Financially, Emms faced acute hardship by 2017, accruing unpaid bills and resorting to selling personal items, including clothing, on eBay to cover basic expenses as a mother of two.[61] She disclosed contemplating low-wage work at Starbucks, remarking that such a role would be a pragmatic necessity given her circumstances, though she emphasized the psychological toll of repeated professional setbacks.[62] These struggles, rooted in the limited earning potential of her badminton career and inadequate transition support, left her "battling financially" without immediate homelessness but in a precarious state akin to many ex-athletes.[52][63] In May 2020, amid persistent economic challenges, Emms undertook a temporary position as a COVID-19 tester at a drive-through facility in Milton Keynes, involving eight-hour shifts over four days weekly following specialized training.[64] This role provided short-term stability during the pandemic but underscored her ongoing reliance on ad-hoc employment opportunities unavailable during her competitive years.[65]Criticisms of Athlete Support Systems
Emms has highlighted empirical shortcomings in UK Sport's post-Olympic funding mechanisms, particularly following the 2008 Beijing Games, where British badminton's failure to medal prompted funding reductions for Badminton England, resulting in staff cuts and athlete retirements that destabilized support infrastructure.[66] She argued that such abrupt defunding, as later exemplified by the post-2016 Rio slash from £5.9 million to zero despite a bronze medal, undermines long-term athlete development without adequate transition safeguards, contrasting with more sustainable models like Denmark's emphasis on grassroots continuity over short-term medal incentives.[52] This approach, while yielding Olympic successes, fosters a "pressure cooker" environment leading to early retirements and unaddressed vulnerabilities, with Emms noting over 200 athletes reporting similar post-career struggles.[52] A core critique centers on the inadequacy of transition programs, where Emms received only three months of support via the English Institute of Sport's Performance Lifestyle service immediately after Beijing, insufficient for sustained reintegration despite ongoing needs nine years into retirement.[57] She described athletes as being "chewed up and spat out," with UK Sport's short-term interventions—often limited to six months—failing to address persistent mental health and financial gaps, as evidenced by rising reports of depression and anxiety among ex-elite competitors.[67] Emms called for systemic enhancements, questioning, "Where is that duty of care then?" and urging UK Sport to extend responsibility beyond active competition to prevent the identity loss and isolation she and peers experienced.[67][57] Emms also linked support deficiencies to broader integrity lapses, as in her 2012 response to the London Olympics match-fixing scandal involving eight players disqualified for deliberately losing games to manipulate brackets.[68] She deemed the incidents "disgraceful" and damaging to badminton's professional ecosystem, criticizing the Badminton World Federation for ignoring pre-event warnings, which exacerbated funding pressures and eroded trust in athlete oversight structures.[69] Such failures, Emms contended, compound empirical gaps in holistic support, as unstable integrity undermines the stable environments needed for effective post-career programs compared to nations prioritizing comprehensive welfare.[52]Public Disclosure and Advocacy Efforts
In August 2017, Emms publicly disclosed her severe financial and mental health challenges following retirement, stating in interviews that she felt "lost" and was contemplating low-wage employment such as at Starbucks to make ends meet.[63] [70] These revelations, including a BBC Sport interview where she detailed the difficulties of transitioning from elite sport, highlighted the lack of structured support for retired athletes and prompted broader media coverage on the prevalence of post-career depression among Olympians.[57] Emms explicitly called for enhanced mental health resources, noting ongoing discussions about athlete welfare but emphasizing her immediate need for such aid.[63] By October 2017, Emms expanded on her experiences in The Guardian, describing a profound identity crisis after badminton—"I lost my identity in badminton. I lost me"—and advocating for better preparation to ease the retirement "grief" many athletes face.[52] This disclosure contributed to heightened awareness of transition challenges, aligning with contemporaneous reports on elite athletes' vulnerabilities and influencing conversations within sports organizations about proactive welfare measures.[52] [67] Emms has since engaged in advocacy through public speaking on resilience and mental health, collaborating with groups like Life After Professional Sport (LAPS) to support transitioning athletes via peer networks and resources.[71] Her efforts include event appearances emphasizing athlete welfare, where she draws from personal recovery to promote early intervention, though direct policy shifts remain tied to collective industry responses rather than isolated attribution.[71] These initiatives have fostered peer support dialogues, as evidenced by her role in platforms addressing gender-specific barriers and post-sport stability.[72]Later Career and Activities
Media Work and Motivational Speaking
Following her recovery from post-retirement challenges, Emms transitioned into media roles, providing commentary and punditry for badminton events. She has served as a commentator for the BBC, including during the London 2012 Olympics, where she offered expert analysis on matches.[11] Her media involvement extends to presentations for Sky Sports and BT Sport, covering major tournaments and delivering insights drawn from her competitive experience.[73] Emms continues to work as a sports commentator and analyst for various outlets, focusing on professional breakdowns of elite play.[10] In parallel, Emms established a career in motivational speaking, emphasizing themes of resilience, overcoming adversity, and peak performance derived from her athletic journey. She delivers after-dinner and keynote addresses through her consultancy, sharing stories of triumph to corporate and organizational audiences.[74] Booked via agencies specializing in Olympians, her engagements include corporate events where she discusses mindset and goal achievement.[16] A notable example is her dinner speech at TransCityRail South 2025 on July 14, 2025, where she addressed rail industry professionals on personal resilience and self-determination as keys to success.[75] These pursuits have provided Emms with professional stability, contrasting her earlier financial difficulties after retiring from badminton in 2008. Corporate speaking gigs and media appearances offer consistent income through verifiable bookings, supporting her shift to advisory and public-facing roles.[76]Shift to Pickleball and New Competitions
Following her retirement from professional badminton, Gail Emms began competing in pickleball in late 2024, marking a shift to the paddle sport amid its growing popularity in the United Kingdom.[77] Her entry into the discipline leveraged her elite racket-sport background, with Emms noting in a June 2025 podcast interview that the transition allowed her to rediscover the "joy of competition and community" absent in her post-badminton life.[78] This rediscovery stemmed from pickleball's accessible yet intense format, played on a badminton-sized court to 11 points, which echoed elements of her prior expertise while demanding adaptations like dinking precision over smashing power.[79] Emms quickly engaged in competitive events, debuting at the 2024/2025 English Nationals in women's singles (4.0 rating, 15+ division), where her badminton-honed footwork and court awareness provided a clear edge against recreational opponents.[80] She also joined the Premier Pickleball League in 2025, describing the experience as a "whirlwind" that reignited her competitive drive through team dynamics and rapid progression.[81] In May 2025, Emms expressed ambitions to elevate her participation to higher-profile circuits, aspiring to events akin to those backed by figures like Andre Agassi, while emphasizing pickleball's communal appeal as a counter to elite sport's isolation.[82] Her self-described "John McEnroe of pickleball" persona—fiery and unfiltered—has similarly carried over, fostering engagement in a sport she views as inclusive for former athletes seeking renewed purpose.[83]Authorship and Publications
In 2024, Emms authored The Lost Lionesses: The Incredible Story of England's Forgotten Trailblazers, a historical account detailing the experiences of the 1971 England women's football team, including her mother Carol Huxley, who participated in the inaugural Women's World Cup in Mexico despite opposition from the Football Association (FA).[84][85] The book exposes the FA's bans on players—ranging from three months to two years for competing outside official channels—and the media mockery that erased their achievements, framing it as a narrative of systemic neglect toward female athletes pioneering the sport.[86] Emms collaborated with surviving team members to reconstruct events from primary accounts, emphasizing empirical recovery of overlooked records to challenge institutionalized oversight in English football governance.[87] The work was shortlisted for the 2025 Charles Tyrwhitt Sports Book Awards in the Women's Sports category, highlighting its role in documenting causal barriers to women's advancement in team sports.[88] Emms's 2025 autobiography, Grit and Goose Feathers: Chasing Medals and Finding Me, published on October 13 by Pitch Publishing, provides an unfiltered examination of her badminton career alongside personal reinvention, covering rigorous training regimens, competitive pressures, and post-Olympic transitions into midlife challenges like dating mishaps and social pursuits such as raving.[89][90] Drawing from her firsthand experiences, the book underscores the psychological and logistical realities of elite athleticism, including the shift from podium success to everyday domesticity, without romanticizing the athlete's path.[91] Emms describes the writing process as therapeutic, motivated by a desire to convey authentic causal sequences in sports progression—such as how early failures propelled Olympic qualification—serving as a candid counterpoint to sanitized sports memoirs.[92] Both publications reflect Emms's commitment to revealing unvarnished truths about athletic ecosystems, prioritizing survivor testimonies and self-reflective analysis over narrative embellishment, amid a landscape where official sports histories often underrepresent individual agency and institutional frictions.[93]Personal Life
Relationships and Family
Emms has been in a long-term relationship with Ed Vince, with whom she resides in Milton Keynes.[94] [95] They have two sons: Harry, born in March 2010, and Oliver, born in May 2013.[94] [95] Emms has described the arrival of her first child as a pivotal positive influence amid personal challenges.[94] Little public information exists regarding Emms's extended family or prior relationships, reflecting her preference for privacy in non-professional matters. Her professional partnership with badminton player Nathan Robertson, which yielded major successes including the 2004 Olympic silver medal, was strictly platonic despite their close on-court chemistry.[96]Honors, Awards, and Recognition
In the 2009 Queen's Birthday Honours, Gail Emms was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) for services to badminton, acknowledging her Olympic silver medal, world championship title, and consistent international performances in doubles events.[28][4] The award was formally invested by the Princess Royal at Buckingham Palace on 4 December 2009.[97] Emms's MBE reflects empirical achievements, including her pivotal role in elevating British badminton's profile through medals at the Olympics, Commonwealth Games, and European Championships, which contributed to increased participation and funding in the sport domestically.[98] No further formal honors, such as Hall of Fame inductions, have been documented for her competitive or post-retirement contributions.Achievements and Competitive Record
Major Titles Summary
Gail Emms secured numerous accolades in badminton, predominantly in mixed doubles alongside Nathan Robertson, with additional successes in women's doubles. Her major achievements include Olympic, World, European, and Commonwealth medals, alongside victories at prestigious tournaments like the All England Open.| Year | Event | Medal | Discipline | Partner(s) | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Commonwealth Games | Gold | Mixed team | England team | Manchester[17] |
| 2004 | European Championships | Gold | Mixed doubles | Nathan Robertson | Geneva[17] |
| 2004 | Olympic Games | Silver | Mixed doubles | Nathan Robertson | Athens[4] |
| 2005 | All England Open | Gold | Mixed doubles | Nathan Robertson | Birmingham[17] |
| 2006 | Commonwealth Games | Gold | Mixed doubles | Nathan Robertson | Melbourne[17][99] |
| 2006 | World Championships | Gold | Mixed doubles | Nathan Robertson | Madrid[42] |
| 2006 | European Championships | Gold | Women's doubles | Donna Kellogg | 's-Hertogenbosch[35] |