Text by BWF
The crowd inside Axiata Arena expected a familiar script.
On one side stood Malaysia’s eighth-seeded home favourites, Goh Soon Huat and Shevon Jemie Lai. On the other, Presley Smith and Jennie Gai, an American partnership still finding its place on the world’s biggest stages.
Just 35 minutes later, the script had been rewritten.
Smith and Gai walked off with a stunning 21-9 21-17 victory in the PETRONAS Malaysia Open 2026 second round, becoming the first doubles pair from the USA to reach a Super 1000 quarterfinal.
For American badminton, it was a breakthrough moment. For the players, it barely felt real.
“It’s just crazy,” Smith admitted afterward, still buzzing from the intensity. “I don’t even believe it yet. I was like, ‘just finish the match’. I’m still shaking a bit but just really happy.”
From the opening rally, the Americans played with clarity and courage. They moved quickly, defended relentlessly and attacked without hesitation.
“We performed at our highest,” Smith said. “I’m proud of our efforts in this match.
“When we took the first game, we had a lot of momentum. We just tried to bring it all into the second game. We wanted to avoid the rubber because then it becomes 50-50.
“We pushed hard at the start of the second, got an early lead and it helped us keep the gap. Even though they came back a bit, we held on.”
That steadiness reflected months of work behind the scenes. At the completion of their season at Kumamoto Masters in November, Smith committed himself to physical preparation, logging hours in the gym and on the track.
“I’ve just been focusing on my physical training,” he said. “Time in the gym and running a lot more so I can keep up the speed with the top players. It’s paying off.”
For Gai, the key lay as much in the mind as in the body.
“It’s important to treat every match the same,” she said. “If I think about the result too much, I get nervous and mistakes creep in. So I went in treating it like every other match, every point zero all.”

The win was historic but Gai was quick to look ahead.
“This is all very crazy,” she said. “But I don’t want to stop here. We just want to play our best and win more matches.”
Confidence has been quietly building since the end of 2025, fuelled by results and quality training back home. Now, with a landmark quarterfinal berth secured, that belief feels firmly grounded.
The new year, as Gai put it, has started well. And for American badminton, it suddenly feels full of possibility.







