Sunday, June 10, 2007




Table tennis is an Olympic sport where two or four players hit a ball with bats back and forth to each other on a table, in a manner similar to tennis. The rules are slightly different, but the concept is basically the same. When you serve, the ball is not required to hit the opposite box on the table, but many people believe it is supposed to because of its sister sport Tennis. Ball spin, speed, placement, strategy and tactics play an important part in competitive table tennis matches. The speed of the ball can vary from slow serves with much spin to smashes that travel as fast as 112.5 kilometers per hour (69.9 miles per hour).


The game is played on a 274 cm (9 ft.) × 152.5 cm (5 ft.) × 76 cm (2.5 ft.) high playing surface. The International Table Tennis Federation requires an area not less than 14 m (46 ft) long, 7 m (23 ft) wide and 5 m (16 ft) high for competitions. No limitations in size or shape are specified. Modern bats usually have a thin layer of rubber covering the bat's striking surface. The rubber may have pimples pointing outwards or inwards, as well as a thin layer of sponge between the plywood center and the rubber surface. Since spin plays a large role in the modern sport of table tennis, the composition of the rubber and the combination of sponge and rubber is designed to maximize the amount of spin and speed a player can impart onto the ball. Other technological improvements include the use of carbon or other synthetic layers as part of the blade to increase the sweet spot or the stiffness of the blade.


The ball used in table tennis has a diameter of 40 mm, is made of celluloid, and is completely hollow. A three star rating on a ball usually implies a top quality ball, in relation to its bounce, roundness and their respective consistency between balls of the same make and type.
The winner is the first to score 21 points, with each player alternating serves every five points. At 20-20 (or deuce) the players alternate with every serve; the winner is then the first person to gain a clear two points advantage over his opponent. The 11 point game is an International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) change which occurred in 2001.

All games played at national level and at international tournaments (ITTF) are played to 21 points in either a best of five (5) games (preliminaries) or best of seven (7) games format (championship matches).
Table tennis (also commonly known as ping pong) is a sport in which two or four players hit a ball back and forth to each other with bats (also sometimes called raquets or paddles). The game takes place on a table divided by a net. Players must allow a ball played towards them only one bounce on their side of the table and must return it so that it bounces on the opponent's side. Play is fast and demands quick reactions. A skilled player can impart spin to the ball, which makes its bounce and its reaction on the opponent's bat difficult to predict or return with confidence.

Table tennis is very popular, especially in East Asia and is among the most popular sports in the world in terms of player numbers, as well as one of the newest of the major sports.