(Picture Credit - Daniel Schwen)
The following blog was first posted on Triond on 12th January. It got 6 Views and went onto the "Sportales" top ten straight away. However, unfortunately I made a typo on the submission page: "champoinship" so I asked for a "fix". They fixed the title and even the URL, but sadly none of the links work (apart from a link in "Sportales:Sports") so nobody can see the blog. Hence no further Views. Rant over. Here it is (Enjoy):
This
is not Table Tennis as we know it. Called “Liha” in the Philippines: played
with sandpaper-covered bats. I watched it on Sky Sports early in the New Year.
Maxim Shmyrev (Russia) was defending his title here, at the Alexandra Palace,
in London...
It was not Table Tennis as we know it. Early in the
New Year I watched highlights of the Ping Pong World Championships on Sky
Sports. This tournament was held at the Alexandra Palace, London.
Most Table Tennis (confusingly called “Ping Pong” by
the Americans) is now played with bats (American “paddles”) covered with sponge
and very fast, spinny rubber. Very spinny rubber indeed. Most of the top
players play a “three-ball-attacking” game: swirly horrible spin serve followed
up by an attacking topspin-loop-drive, usually a big forehand. Harsher critics
of the modern game say that it’s too “samey”: all the players are the same and
there are few rallies. Sometimes it’s the player with the best bat
who wins. This is like watching lawn tennis when it was dominated by
serve-volleyers and formula one if ruled by one constructor.
“Ping Pong”, or “Liha” as the Filipinos call it, is
different. Everyone uses the “same” bat, as far as physically possible: the
wooden blade is covered with black sandpaper. On this occasion bats were handed
out by the organizers to competitors just before the start of each match.
Sandpaper puts next to no spin on the ball. Yet
these international Table Tennis players were able to topspin-loop the ball
very effectively. Unlike in modern table tennis, players seemed reluctant to
block back those loops, preferring instead to backspin-chop the ball back. Thus
there were many long loop versus chop rallies, like there was (I’m told) in the
1930s when short-pimpled-rubber-covered hard bats were used. Ping Pong seems
much more “tactical”, again a throw-back to the good old days.
The highlight for me, however, was seeing the
amazing Backhand attack of a Lithuanian girl called Egle Adomelyte. Like me she
uses a mainly wrist movement on her backhand, but she plays it from almost
anywhere, attacking both wings of her opponent. Egle seemed to use very long fast
serves mainly and then attack every return. I say “seemed” because it’s
difficult to tell serve-length on the telly. Anyway, she reached the last 16
and was unlucky to lose there to Martin Groenewold (Netherlands) 11-7, 6-11,
9-11. (Yes, most matches were best of 3 ends). As the only female in the
tournament Egle showed lots of Girl Power!
Another “difference” in this tournament was that
each player, in each match, could call for a “Two Point Ball”: any point won
with that ball would be doubled. Nice variation. (Most points were played with
a yellow ball, but the two pointer was white.
Last year this same Championship was played in Las
Vegas (America), with lots of razzmatazz (as you can imagine)! Maxim Shmyrev
(Russia) won that first title, and lots of US Dollars. Well this time he won
again. He beat Sule Olaleye (Nigeria) 11-5, 13-15, 11-9, 9-11, 11-8 in the 5
end final for $20,000. Sule won $10,000. The losing semi finalists got $5,000
each: Christopher Doran (England) and Ilija Lupulesku (USA).
Sule was the Nemesis of the Brits in this
competition. In the last 16 he defeated Gavin Rumgay (Scotland), then beat
Andrew Baggaley (England’s Number Two) and then Christopher Doran (England).
The Filipinos made a good showing. Richard Gonzales
and Joseph Cruz reached the quarter finals. Having dominated the US Open
earlier, they were philosophical in eventual defeat. Incidentally, they were
the only Asian country to respond positively to the invitation to participate.
Much was made of the presence here of “Veterans”
such as Patrick Chila (France) and former England number one Denis Neale. Sadly
the latter fell in the group stages.
Altogether an interesting experiment. As for me, I’m busy practising my backhand attack to my opponent’s forehand wing.
Paul
Butters