World Table Tennis Championships

The World Table Tennis Championships are table tennis competitions sanctioned by the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF). The World Championships have been held since 1926, biennially since 1957. Five individual events, which include men's singles, women's singles, men's doubles, women's double and mixed doubles, are currently held in odd numbered years. The World Team Table Tennis Championships, which include men's team and women's team events, were first their own competition in 2000. The Team Championships are held in even numbered years.

World Table Tennis Championships
2009 WTTC in Yokohama, Japan
StatusActive
GenreGlobal sports event
Date(s)c. April–May
FrequencyAnnual
Inaugurated1926 (1926)
Organised byITTF

In the earlier days of the tournament, Hungary's men's team was a dominant force, winning the championships 12 times. This was followed by a short period of dominance by Japan in the 1950s. From the 1960s onwards, China emerged as the new dominant power in this tournament and, with the exception of 1989–2000, when Sweden won four times, China continues to dominate the sport. China's men's team holds a record 21 world team championship titles.

In the 1950s, Japan's women team was a force to be reckoned with winning a total of 8 titles. The Chinese women started their strong grip on the world team championships from the 1970s onwards. They have only lost twice since 1975. China holds 21 women's team titles.

Trophies

Japanese men's team won Swaythling Cup at the 1955 World Table Tennis Championships
Romanian women's team with the Corbillon Cup in 1955
North Korean Kim Hyok-bong and Kim Jong won mixed doubles trophy, the Heydusek Cup, in 2013.

There are 7 different trophies presented to the winners of the various events, held by winning associations, and returned for the next world championships.[1]

  • Singles competition:
  • St. Bride Vase for men's singles, donated in 1929 by C.Corti Woodcock, member of the exclusive St. Bride Table Tennis Club in London, after Fred Perry of England won the title in Budapest
  • Geist Prize for women's singles, donated in 1931 by Dr. Gaspar Geist, president of the Hungarian Table Tennis Association
  • Doubles competition:
  • Iran Cup for men's doubles; first presented at the 1947 World Championships by the Shah of Iran
  • W.J. Pope Trophy for women's doubles; donated in 1948 by the ITTF honorary general secretary W.J. Pope
  • Heydusek Cup for mixed doubles; donated in 1948 by Zdenek Heydusek, secretary of the Czechoslovakia Association.
  • Team competition:
    • Swaythling Cup for men's team, donated in 1926 by Lady Baroness Swaythling, mother of the first ITTF president, Ivor Montagu
    • Corbillon Cup for women's team, donated in 1933 by Marcel Corbillon, president of the French Table Tennis Association
      The German women's team won the Cup in 1939, and the original Cup disappeared during Berlin occupation after World War II; the current Corbillon Cup is a replica made in 1949.

In addition, the Egypt Cup is presented to the next host of world championships. The Cup was donated by King Farouk of Egypt in 1939, when the championships were held in Cairo, Egypt.

Championships

The ITTF held individual events and team events separately for the first time in 1999 and 2000 respectively, and 2001 was the last time individual and team events were held together. Starting in 2003 individual events and team events were held separately again and each continue to be held separately every other year.

  Individual events   Team events

Edition Year Host Events
1 1926 London, United Kingdom 5
2 1928 Stockholm, Sweden 6
3 1929 Budapest, Hungary 6
4 1930 Berlin, Germany 6
5 1931 Budapest, Hungary 6
6 1932 Prague, Czechoslovakia 6
7 1933 Baden bei Wien, Austria 6
8 1933 Paris, France 7
9 1935 London, United Kingdom 7
10 1936 Prague, Czechoslovakia 7
11 1937 Baden bei Wien, Austria 7
12 1938 London, United Kingdom 7
13 1939 Cairo, Egypt 7
14 1947 Paris, France 7
15 1948 London, United Kingdom 7
16 1949 Stockholm, Sweden 7
17 1950 Budapest, Hungary 7
18 1951 Vienna, Austria 7
19 1952 Mumbai, India 7
20 1953 Bucharest, Romania 7
21 1954 London, United Kingdom 7
22 1955 Utrecht, Netherlands 7
23 1956 Tokyo, Japan 7
24 1957 Stockholm, Sweden 7
25 1959 Dortmund, Germany 7
26 1961 Beijing, China 7
27 1963 Prague, Czechoslovakia 7
28 1965 Ljubljana, Yugoslavia 7
29 1967 Stockholm, Sweden 7
30 1969 Munich, Germany 7
31 1971 Nagoya, Japan 7
32 1973 Sarajevo, Yugoslavia 7
33 1975 Kolkata, India 7
34 1977 Birmingham, United Kingdom 7
35 1979 Pyongyang, North Korea 7
36 1981 Novi Sad, Yugoslavia 7
37 1983 Tokyo, Japan 7
38 1985 Gothenburg, Sweden 7
39 1987 New Delhi, India 7
40 1989 Dortmund, Germany 7
Edition Year Host Events
41 1991 Chiba City, Japan 7
42 1993 Gothenburg, Sweden 7
43 1995 Tianjin, China 7
44 1997 Manchester, United Kingdom 7
45 1999 Eindhoven, Netherlands 5
45 2000 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2
46 2001 Osaka, Japan 7
47 2003 Paris, France 5
47 2004 Doha, Qatar 2
48 2005 Shanghai, China 5
48 2006 Bremen, Germany 2
49 2007 Zagreb, Croatia 5
49 2008 Guangzhou, China 2
50 2009 Yokohama, Japan 5
50 2010 Moscow, Russia 2
51 2011 Rotterdam, Netherlands 5
51 2012 Dortmund, Germany 2
52 2013 Paris, France 5
52 2014 Tokyo, Japan 2
53 2015 Suzhou, China 5
53 2016 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2
54 2017 Düsseldorf, Germany 5
54 2018 Halmstad, Sweden 2
55 2019 Budapest, Hungary 5
- 2020 Busan, South Korea -
56 2021 Houston, United States 5
56 2022 Chengdu, China[2] 2
57 2023 Durban, South Africa[3] 5
57 2024 Busan, South Korea[4] 2

Medal table

Multiple medalists

Top 10 medalists at the World Table Tennis Championships (including at team events) are listed below.[5]

Men

Rank Player Country From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1Victor Barna Hungary  England192919542271241
2Miklós Szabados Hungary19291937156324
3Bohumil Váňa Czechoslovakia193519551310730
4Ichiro Ogimura Japan19541965125320
5Ma Long China20062019121316
6Wang Liqin China19972013114520
7Xu Xin China20092019101213
8Ivan Andreadis Czechoslovakia19471957910827
9Ferenc Sidó Hungary1947196199826
10Ma Lin China1999201397420

Women

Rank Player Country From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1Mária Mednyánszky Hungary19261936186428
2Angelica Rozeanu Romania19371957175830
3Wang Nan China19972008153220
4Anna Sipos Hungary19291935116421
5Gizella Farkas Hungary19471959109827
6Guo Yue China20032013105217
7Zhang Yining China19992009102416
8Li Xiaoxia China2006201695216
9Deng Yaping China198919979514
10Ding Ning China2009201985316

See also

References

  1. "The World Championship Trophies- A Retrospective". ittf.com. ITTF. Retrieved 22 June 2010.
  2. "China's Chengdu bidding to host 2022 World Table Tennis Championships". Xinhua. 9 March 2019. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  3. "South Africa to host World Table Tennis Championships for first time after Durban beats Düsseldorf in 2023 race". insidethegames.biz. 28 September 2020. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  4. "Busan to host 2024 table tennis world championships". Yonhap. 25 November 2021. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  5. "Medalists of World Table Tennis Championships". tabletennis.guide. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
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