Recap of 2017 Chinese National Games Prelims

Recap: A Show with the Experienced, the Greats and the Youth

Greetings and welcome to the end of a busy week. The preliminary round of the Chinese National Games was held from 23 March to 29 March 2017 in Anshan, Liaoning. In the competition 16 pairs of mixed doubles, men's doubles and women's doubles; 24 men and women;12 men's team and women's team qualify to the final stage of the Chinese National Games which will be held from 28 August to 6 September in Tianjin.

Qualifiers of the final stage of the Chinese National Games are as follow:

Throwback Thursday: 12 Years on the Sidelines, Veterans are Valuable Assets to the Team -- Zhang Chao and Hao Shuai

The preliminary round of the Chinese National Games has just ended. There might be games that introduce us to some new faces; there might be spectacular rallies that remind us the marvellous technique of the familiar faces. Today's Throwback Thursday features the 2 of the familiar faces, Zhang Chao and Hao Shuai.



The 'Six Little Dragons', (from the left) Zhang Chao, Shan Mingjie, Chen Qi, Wang Hao, Hao Shuai and Qiu Yike

Day 7 Results: Men's Singles & Women's Singles -- 13th Chinese National Games Prelims

Day 7 Results: Save the Best for Last

The last day of the meet always has the most spectacular matches, even in the preliminary round. The men's singles came up with fierce competitions. Celebrations for some and upsets for the others. Most seeded players in the women's singles defended their spots but the process was not easy at all.

In men's singles, Lin Gaoyuan (Guangdong) and Shang Kun (Shanghai) were forced out by the unknown penhold short-pips players, Wang Linkun (Hunan) and Jie Jianwei (Yunnan) respectively, giving away the chance to qualify to the Chinese National Games. (Watch Lin's match here!) There is no hope for Shang Kun to qualify to the Games but Lin Gaoyuan will have a second chance, if he makes his way to the podium in the Worlds this year. After Lin Gaoyuan took the ticket to Worlds, the coaches and the media have high hopes on him. In return, he overworked himself. However great haste is not always good speed. Fortunately this was just the prelims but not the Worlds. We hope he have learned a lesson from this experience.


Day 6 Results: Men's doubles, Women's doubles and Men's singles -- 13th Chinese National Games Prelims

Day 6 Results: The Calm Before the Storm

Day 6 of the competition includes men's doubles, women's doubles and men's singles. There are a few surprises but nothing mind-blowing. 


The biggest black horse in the women's side, Zhao Lin (Guangxi), has surprised us again in the women's doubles after her impressive 12-straight-win in the prior team competition. She and her partner, Hao Hao (Tibet) forced the renowned national team members Chen Xingtong / Wen Jia (Liaoning) to the last set. Despite losing the match, their performance wins the hearts of the audience. 

Other top-seeded doubles did not face challenges from the young. Xu Xin / Ma Long (Shanghai / Beijing) and Ding Ning / Liu Shiwen (Beijing / Guangdong) romped to victory, using less than 15 minutes to end the match. Well, their victory does not surprise us but we did not expect the competition was that incredibly short. Maybe a few exhibition points at the end of the set next time?

Bounce back is the key word of the men's doubles. There were several matches started with a 0-2 deficit and bounce back winning 3-2, including Ren Hao / Xia Yizheng (Henan) Vs. Xu Chenhao / Zhao Zhaoyan (PLA),  Fan Shengpeng / Cheng Jingqi (Hebei)  Vs. Chen Peng / Cao Meng (Ningxia) and Zhao Zihao / Kong Lingxuan (Shanghai / Shandong) Vs. Liu Jikang / Hao Shuai ( Liaoning / Tianjin) [Watch here on the left]. There is also a 'bounce back' in men's singles, Song Xu (PLA) Vs. Wang Chuqin (Beijing) [ Watch here]. Regarding these I conclude table tennis is like tossing a coin, you never know whether you will win or lose until the last point ends.

In yesterday's competition we saw a wide range of playing styles. The penhold, the choppers, the short-pips...After rounds of competitions, Wu Yang (Shanxi) and Hu Limei (PLA) is the only defensive pair who qualify to the Chinese National Games while the others are dominated by the conventional shakehand players playing with inverted rubber. Thanks for the policies that each team must comprise of a penhold player or chopper for the men's and a penhold player for women's team, choppers and penhold players will not become 'extinct' in the Chinese National Games.

Last but not least, congratulations to the pairs who qualify to the final stage! Check the results below. There will be men's singles and women's singles tomorrow!

Day 5 Results: Mixed Doubles, Women's Singles, Men's Singles -- 13th Chinese National Games Prelims

Day 5 Results: 1 Plus 1 is Larger Than 2 ? The Chemistry in Doubles

The mixed doubles have definitely added some finishing touches to today's competition.

Disappointing results for Fang Bo and Chen Meng. The partnership of two strong players from Team Shandong did not make their way to Tianjin (the final stage), losing 3-1 to Xu Yingbin and Liu Ming (Hei Longjiang / Yunnan). Fang Bo and Chen Meng did have a chance of winning the match as they won the 2nd set with 11-1 and had a lead in the 3rd set but inconsistency has cost them the qualification to the final stage. The two young players, Xu Yingbin and Liu Ming are the black horse of the meet. They beat Shang Kun and Feng Yalan in the first round and have played well throughout the competition. We look forward to seeing the emergence of the two young players.

The defeat of Fang Bo and Chen Meng may suggest two strong players do not necessarily form an unbeatable doubles as the pairs need to adapt to their partner's playing style and make the chemistry work together. Fan Zhendong and Zhu Yuling (PLA / Sichuan) on the other hand, demonstrated a good partnership. Zhu Yuling is known for playing rallies but lacking a bit of power. Fan Zhendong's powerful backhand has compensated this shortcoming, making a easy clean sweep in the mixed doubles.

Day 4 Results: Women's Team, Men's Team and Mixed Doubles -- 13th Chinese National Games Prelims

Day 4 Results: Liu Shiwen Fought Hard But Cannot Help, Team Guangdong is Out

Last Day
for the Team Competition and the Mixed Doubles starts the night. Check the following results to see which teams will be playing in the Chinese National Games scheduled on 28 August, 2017!


The match of the day goes to Shanghai Vs Guangdong in the women's team.

Day 3 Results: Women's Team and Men's Team -- 13th Chinese National Games Prelims

Day 3 Results: Ma Long was Given a Mercy Point! The Young Challenging the Top

Day 3! Another day of the team competitions. Several decisive matches have been played today. Some teams have secured their spots to the final stage while some leave the suspense till the last match. Which team will qualify to the final stage of the Chinese National Games?

Check the results below! 

Who Vs Who? -- 13th Chinese National Games Prelims Draws (MS/WS/MD/WD/XD)

The draws of the remaining events have announced! Since this is the qualifications of the Chinese National Games, this competition will not come up with the medalists. Names highlighted in yellow are seeds of the competitions. Comment below and guess who we will see in late August in Tianjin!


Mixed Doubles Draws


Day 2 Results: Men's Team & Women's Team -- 13th Chinese National Games Prelims

Day 2 Results -- First Taste of Victory for the Amateur Team Macau 

Day 2
of the men's team and women's team event came up with quite a breakthrough for Macau women's team
There are 33 teams competing in the preliminary round but not all of them are professional table tennis players.

Day 1 Results: Men's Team & Women's Team -- 13th Chinese National Games Prelims

Day 1 Results: Liu Shiwen's 2 Points Didn't Turn into Victory

In Day 1
of the Prelims of the 13th Chinese National Games,
 Women's team and Men's team events start the jam-packed competition schedule.


In the women's side, Liu Shiwen
from Team Guangdong fought hard in the match against Team Henan. Despite winning 2 points for the team, it is not enough to beat Team Henan. She did not play in the match against Team Heilongjiang, which has competitive young players like Wang Manyu and Che Xiaoxi. Group 4, Team Shandong, with Chen Meng, Gu Yuting and Liu Gaoyang, is out of the league, making a clean sweep in the first day.

In the men's side
, Ma Long from Team Beijing is still recovering from his injury and did not play in today's competition. However Team Beijing with Yan An and 16-year-old future star, Wang Chuqin, is still too strong to be defeated. In Group 4, the 'Group of Death', Team Guangdong has a close match against Team Sichuan. Lin Gaoyuan, the main player of Team Guangdong did not play in the match because of a cramping back pain. Zhang Chao, the 32-year-old veteran beat Zhu Linfeng and Lai Jiaxin of Team Sichuan, winning 2 crucial points for Team Guangdong. What a shaky start of 3-2 for Team Guangdong! 


The results are as follow:

Throwback Thursday: Who Were They? The No.1 Seeds -- Yan An and Wu Yang

The preliminary round of the Chinese National Games is approaching. Yan An and Wu Yang are listed as the no.1 seed of the men's singles and women's singles respectively, with the medalists of the Worlds, World Cup Finals and Olympics directly qualified to the final stage of the National Games. Today's Throwback Thursday takes us back in time to the days when Yan An and Wu Yang were emerging young athletes.


Yan An (left) and Wu Yang (right) in 2015 WTTC
Source: Sina Sport

Coming Up this April -- 2017 Asian Championships Schedule

2017 Asian Championships is less than a month away and finally ittf has announced the general schedule (click here)! For your information, the competition is held in Wuxi, Jiangsu, China, a beautiful city also known as 'the Pearl of the Taihu Lake' and the local time is (GMT+8). Make sure you follow the matches on time!

Here is the brief version of the schedule in local time (GMT+8):


Who Will Be at the 2017 Asian Championships?

The 2017 Asian Championships will be held from 9 April to 16 April at Wuxi Sports Centre Gym, Wuxi, Jiangsu, China. There are seven events, team, singles and doubles for both men and women and mixed doubles. ITTF has done a great job in explaining the competition format. Check out the site.

There are no official line-up of the competition but the ticket office has given some hints about that. So here is the line-up according to the ticket office. (The 
link to the ticket office .)

The 'Mini-Olympics' -- Schedule of the Chinese National Games

The 13th Chinese National Games will be held in Tianjin
Source: http://www.tianjin2017.gov.cn/


The preliminary round of the Chinese National Games is yet to begin, while the schedule of the main draw has announced. Table tennis event is scheduled from 28 August to 6 September. There will be seven events, team, singles and doubles for both men and women and mixed doubles. The competition will be held in Wuqing Gymnasium, Tianjin, China.

Visit the official website of the Chinese National Games here (Chinese version only).
The schedule for all the sports events is listed here (Chinese version only).

The Chinese National Games is a multi-sport event. Most of the sport events will be held from mid-August to mid-September. Follow the National Games, a game to enjoy and celebrate!

Throwback Thursday: 2010 Chinese TrialsThe Match between the Two Legends -- Wang Liqin Vs Ma Lin

The Chinese Trials has just ended while the preliminary round of the Chinese National Games is yet to begin. With players training hard for the next competition, there are not many news reported. So let's do a Throwback Thursday to review some of the great matches!

With the depth of the Chinese team, the selection process of the participants of the Worlds and the Olympic Games is no easy decision to make. There was Ma Lin missing the 2000 Olympics despite winning a silver medal in the Worlds in the previous year. There were also stories about Wang Liqin and Yan Sen the defending Olympic champion in the men's doubles losing to their compatriots Ma Lin and Chen Qi, which had cost them the tickets to Athens in 2004. Since 2006, the Chinese national team has started the Chinese trials to select players to the Worlds and has staged numerous exciting games for table tennis lovers. In the past 11 years, many dark horses, like this year's Lin Gaoyuan, has emerged to the national and international scene via the trials, while the legends take no privileges but fight hard to defend their spots. One of the classics is the match between Wang Liqin and Ma Lin at 2010 Chinese Trials.


Source: Sohu Sport


The 'Hardy Hundreds' -- Line-up of the Chinese National Games Prelims

Ready for more names and tables? Here are part of the line-up. The list is too long, so I have listed some of the more-heard teams and pairs. If you want a complete line-up, click here


7 Events in 7 Days! -- Schedule of the Chinese National Games Prelims


It will be a week jam-packed with competitions! 7 events in one week! Before getting tired of watching table tennis, be prepared for the tables coming up. Yes, I am a 'tablesolic'. Here you go, the schedule!


More than the Marvellous 12 -- Team Draws of the Chinese National Games Prelims

We are always amazed by the dominance of the Chinese table tennis team but seldom do we see the depth of the team. With only three being up in the Olympics and five in the Worlds, many magnificent Chinese players do not get the chance to play internationally. Now we will have the chance to see some of the less-popular but great players and newcomers playing in the prelims of the Chinese National Games.

The Prelims of the Chinese National Games, Table Tennis
The prelims of the table tennis event will be held from 23 March to 29 March in An Shan, Liaoning Province, the city where many great players like Ma Long, Fang Bo and Li Xiaoxia are from. There are seven events, namely, men's team, women's team, men's singles, women's singles, men's doubles, women's doubles and mixed doubles.Players will represent their home province to compete in the National Games. This is also the first time that players are allowed to pair up with players from different provinces in the doubles events.

In Translation: Coach Liu: "Lin has Shuffled the Men's Rankings" -- Closing Speech of 2017 Marvellous 12 with Eng Sub

Coach Liu wrapped up the Marvellous 12 by commenting the 6 players who have reached stage 3 and presented the tickets to the Worlds to the 4 players, Fan Zhendong, Liu Shiwen, Lin Gaoyuan and Ding Ning. Here is the closing ceremony of the Marvellous 12 with English subtitles.

In Translation: 2 Spots Set, Who Will Be the Remaining? -- Post-Marvellous 12 Press Confernece

After a week of intense competition, the Marvellous 12 has finally come to an end. Table tennis fans may be satisfied with the great matches played by the 'marvellous' players but many questions has popped out from our mind as well. The head coach of the Chinese table tennis national team, Liu Guoliang, answered some of them in the press conference. Here is the translation of the press conference.To watch the entire press conference, click here.


What Do You Like About The Blog


It takes you less than a minute while it helps us to improve our content onward. Tell us your thoughts NOW!

Marvellous 12 Results -- Stage 1 to Stage 3 of 2017 Chinese Trials for WTTC

Participants of Stage 1 of the Marvellous 12, Table Tennis Chinese Trials for WTTC
Men
Ma Long, Zhang Jike, Fan Zhendong, Xu Xin
Xu Chenhao, Liang Jingkun, Fang Bo, Zhou Yu
Yan An, Liu Dingshuo, Lin Gaoyuan, Zhou Qihao

Women
Ding Ning, Liu Shiwen, Zhu Yuling, Chen Meng
Feng Yalan, Mu Zi, Chen Ke, Li Jiayi
Wang Manyu, Yuan Xuejiao, Wu Yang, Gu Yuting


Marvellous 12 Competition Format -- 2017 Chinese Trials for WTTC

Competition format of the Marvellous 12

Stage 1: Round robin of 12 players will play the best-of-3 format. The leader of stage 1 (Fan Zhendong & Liu Shiwen) will take the spot to wttc, skipping stage 2 and 3 of the Marvellous 12.


Small Ball Spins the Big Ball

My First Blog! 




Why 'Small ball spins the big ball'?

This is a quote from the Ping-Pong Diplomacy. Although this blog has nothing to do with politics, I like the idea of the small ball (table tennis) spins the big ball (the globe). I believe table tennis can breakthrough borders and connects fans from all over the world. This is also the reason for me doing the translation and making updates on this blog.

Why do I start this blog?

To keep the story simple. I am a table tennis fan. I play table tennis. I watch table tennis competitions. I love the sport!

That sounds a bit too simple and maybe too cliche, so here is the long version. I love table tennis and I usually follow matches by watching live or replay on TV and on computer. It was a personal leisure activity until one day I watched the live streaming of the Marvellous 12 on Youtube. At first, I was doing as usual, being the quiet audience who sat in front of her pc. But then, I found that people were asking for a translation of the Chinese commentary and interview in the live chat corner. Since I am bilingual (Chinese and English), it would be great if I go one step further, translating the commentary into English. I did it. Some people appreciated it. However it seems to be not enough. During the translation process, I answered questions about the competition format, scoring and schedule over and over again. The key problem is the lack of information about the Chinese Trials in English. Understandably the Chinese table tennis team did not plan to provide English information and commentary because it is just a national level competition. Despite the fact that the Marvellous 12 is a national level competition, it is a high-level playing field. The competition can be as intense as the Worlds and Olympics, if not better off. All eyes are on the dominant Chinese, even in the national level competition.It is a pity, if language barrier keeps non-Chinese speaker from enjoying the competition. Therefore I decided to start this blog.

My plan at this moment is to translate information about Chinese table tennis and post them on this blog. Of course I wish to talk about other table tennis competitions and other things BUT given this is my first blog, I dare not to set the bar too high.


Who is table tennis fan?

My table tennis obsession began in 2007 after watching the WTTC men's singles final live on TV (during the midnight). I used to play in school teams but was too nervous to compete and often upset my team members and coaches. Pretty soon as I admitted into university and decided not to train table tennis for competitions. Yet my obsession for the sport never stops. I play table tennis for leisure and follow table tennis competitions in my spare time.

I love to create compilations that encourage conversation and hopefully expose readers to old favorites and new legends and capture the sport and the athletes we love in words and share that passion with others. 
Whereas in my non-table tennis time, I love hiking, visiting museums, watching documentaries and following other sports but table tennis has been and will be my all-time favorite.

Do you have a list of your favorite players? I am not going to tell you mine but keep you in suspense or you will find the answer in my articles!

English is my second language, please forgive my grammatical mistakes and feel free to leave comments and ask questions.I am so thankful to the supportive readers who give great ideas and encouragements. The blog will not come this far without your support. Thanks to the faithful readers who patiently wait for my new posts, hopefully you like this blog.