Table tennis
Table tennis, also known as ping pong, is the second most played sport in the world as well as the newest of the world's major sports. Ping pong ball is the official name for the sport in China.
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2 Competition 3 Notes 4 External links |
It is played with a very light (2.7 grams), high-bouncing hollow celluloid ball of 40 millimeters diameter, on a table 2.74 meters (9 feet) long, 1.525 meters (5 feet) wide, and 76 centimeters (30 inches) high with a masonite or similar manufactured timber, coated with a low-friction, smooth coating. The table or playing surface is divided into two halves by a 15.25 centimeter (6 inch) high net. Players are equipped with a wooden racket (also called bat or paddle) covered with rubber. One side must be black, the other side red.
A point is commenced by the player serving the ball by releasing the ball ( behind the edge of the table) palm up and tossing it at least six inches and then hitting it such that it bounces in the half of the court closest to him, then in the opponent's half. The opponent must then hit it back so that it bounces in the servers half (not bouncing in his own half), and then the players alternate playing the ball and having it bounce on the opponent's side of the table until one makes an error. Errors can be:
Equipment and gameplay
The other player is awarded one point. A player (chosen by a coin toss or other means) serves for two points (regardless of who wins them) and then the serve passes to his opponent for two serves. Typically, games are played to 11 points and a player must win by at least a two point difference. In competition play, matches are typically best of five or seven games. Before 2001, players alternated serves every 5 points and games would be played to 21 points and must be won by at least 2 points.
While popular around the world at a recreational level, most of the world's best competitive players are from China, but several world champion titles have also gone to Sweden. The game is also popular in Croatia and Hungary with some extraordinary players. Skilled players exhibit extraordinarily swift reaction times, but racquet construction (elite players typically select and attach the rubber to their own rackets) contributes significantly to the amount of deviation from the expected ball flight path players can achieve by putting spin on the ball, and the fairly recent development of special glue speeds up the departure of the ball from the rubber, though at the cost of some ball control.
Competition
Notes
External links
