21.fun
Badminton

Victor Lai, Canadian Badminton Champion, Takes on '2 Truths & a Lie'

Canadian badminton champion Victor Lai stepped off the court and into a lighthearted challenge, playing '2 truths & a lie' with CBC in a candid new feature.

Badminton Correspondent · · 3 min read
A badminton racket and shuttlecock resting on a court beside a small notepad with three handwritten statements
Share

Canadian Badminton Star Victor Lai Gets Personal With CBC

Victor Lai, one of Canada's most recognized badminton champions, recently sat down with CBC for a playful but revealing segment of '2 truths & a lie.' The format, simple by design, asks a subject to share three statements about themselves, two accurate and one false, leaving the audience to sort fact from fiction. For Lai, it offered a rare glimpse at the person behind the racket.

The CBC feature, published as part of the broadcaster's ongoing sports coverage, gave Canadian fans a chance to see Lai in a different setting. Away from the intensity of competitive play, he came across as relaxed and willing to have some fun with his public image.

What the Format Reveals About a Champion

The '2 truths & a lie' format has become a popular way for athletes to connect with broader audiences. It requires no script and no rehearsed talking points. Instead, it tends to surface genuine personality, the kind that match-day footage rarely captures. For Lai, whose career has placed him among the top singles players Canada has produced, moments like this help build a connection with fans who may follow his results but know little about him as a person.

Canadian badminton has grown steadily in profile over recent years, and players like Lai have been central to that shift. His performances on the international circuit have drawn attention to the sport domestically, and media appearances, even informal ones like this CBC segment, extend that reach further.

Victor Lai's Profile in Canadian Badminton

Lai has represented Canada at a high level in men's singles badminton, competing in international events and helping raise the sport's standing in a country where ice hockey and soccer have historically dominated sports coverage. His presence in a CBC feature, one of Canada's largest public broadcasters, reflects the growing appetite for badminton content among Canadian sports audiences.

The segment is part of a broader pattern of athletes using accessible, low-stakes formats to engage with media and fans. Rather than a formal interview focused solely on match results and training schedules, '2 truths & a lie' invites athletes to be a little unpredictable. That unpredictability, in a controlled and lighthearted way, tends to resonate.

For badminton fans curious about what Lai revealed in his three statements, the original CBC feature carries the full segment. The broadcaster has been active in profiling Canadian athletes across a range of sports, and Lai's inclusion signals continued recognition of badminton's place in the national sports conversation.

A Broader Moment for Canadian Badminton

Features like this one matter beyond the entertainment value. Visibility in mainstream media helps sports like badminton attract younger players, sponsors, and casual viewers who might not otherwise tune in to a tournament broadcast. When a champion like Lai appears on CBC in a format designed for wide appeal, it does quiet promotional work for the sport as a whole.

Canadian badminton has a development pipeline that has produced competitive players at the junior and senior levels, and sustained media coverage, whether through match reporting or personality-driven segments, keeps that momentum going. Lai, as one of the sport's more prominent faces in Canada, carries some of that responsibility every time he steps in front of a camera.

The CBC segment, light in tone but meaningful in context, is a small but useful example of how athletes and broadcasters can collaborate to grow interest in a sport that deserves more attention than it typically receives in North American media.

Priya Nair

Badminton Correspondent

Priya Nair covers badminton for 21.fun, from BWF World Tour results to player form, rankings and tactics.

More from Badminton