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Sports & venues

Athlete playing Table Tennis

Venues:
ExCeL

Dates: Saturday 28 July – Tuesday 7 August

Gold medals: 4

Athletes: 172 (86 men, 86 women)

Table Tennis: Then and now

Table Tennis began as an after-dinner game, played by upper-class English families. It is now the world’s biggest participation sport, with 40 million competitive players.

Table Tennis has come a long way from its beginnings in the 19th century, when cigar boxes and carved champagne corks were used as bats and balls. Today’s top players use high-tech rackets, hitting the ball at speeds of more than 100mph (160kph).

How to play – and win

Table Tennis, as its name suggests, is based on the same idea as Tennis. In place of a court, it is played on a table that measures 2.74m (9ft) by 1.525m (5ft), with a 15.25cm (6in) - high net.

Players hit the ball across the table, to bounce on the other side of the net. They score a point if their opponent is unable to get the ball back in play, or allows it to bounce more than once.

At the Olympic Games, matches are played over a maximum of seven games, with 11 points required to win a game (with a lead of 2 points). Team events matches are played at the best of 5 matches (4 singles and 1 doubles). Players and Teams progress through knock out rounds in four events: Women’s Singles, Men’s Singles, Women’s Team and Men’s Team.

Table Tennis at the Games

Table Tennis entered the Olympic programme at Seoul 1988, and has featured in every Games since. The sport was an instant hit with television viewers, especially in Asia, where most of the world's top players are based.

China has dominated Olympic Table Tennis, but challengers are emerging from other countries, including Great Britain and Northern Ireland, in time for London 2012.

Facts about Table Tennis

  • Other names for Table Tennis include ‘Ping Pong’, ‘Whiff Waff’ and ‘Flim Flam’, reflecting the sound of the ball being struck and bouncing off the table.
  • Table Tennis balls are hollow and weigh approximately 2.7 grams (0.88 oz). They are made of celluloid.
  • Ivor Montagu of England was the founding ITTF (International Table Tennis Federation) President serving from 1926 until 1967.
  • Top players previously used sophisticated rubbers and apply special glues to their rackets to help them put spin and speed on the ball. This is not allowed anymore after the Olympic Games in Beijing.
  • Table Tennis was banned in the former Soviet Union from 1930 to 1950 because the sport was believed to be harmful to the eyes.

Jargon buster

  • Penholder: A type of grip where the racket is held as if it were a pen.
  • Chop: A downward stroke producing backspin.
  • Loop: A long upward stroke that puts heavy topspin on the ball, making it dip and bounce higher.
  • Push: A gentle stroke that is not designed to win the point.
  • Shakehands: A very popular type of grip that gives a player the best balance of forehand and backhand shots.

Get involved

Table Tennis is fast, fun and easy to learn. If you want to start playing, the chances are there is a club or league near you. Find out more by contacting your home nation’s federation (see 'related websites'):

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Paralympic Table Tennis

Deng Yaping

Table Tennis star

Name: Deng Yaping
Date of birth: 5 February, 1973
Hometown: Zhengzhou, China
Gold medals: 4 

Deng is unbeaten at Olympic Games and won each of the Women's titles twice, at Barcelona 1992 and Atlanta 1996, before retiring at the age of 25. 

In her sport Deng won 18 times at World Title events.

Paul Drinkhall

2012 hopeful

Name: Paul Drinkhall
Date of birth: 16 January, 1990
Hometown: Loftus
Place of birth: Middlesbrough 

Paul became Britain’s number one Table Tennis player at the age of just 16.

In the same year, he also took reigning Olympic Champion Ryu Seung Min to seven games and three match points – something no player was able to do at the Athens 2004 Games.

Paul makes frequent trips to China to train with the best in the world.

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