Join a team, attend an exhibition, or tune in to the pros to catch the fast-moving, skill-heavy game of table tennis, also commonly known as ping pong.
Table tennis is not only a matter of competition; it is also a vehicle for positive social change, a healthy worthwhile use of leisure time, an opportunity to bring people together, and an excellent tool for social inclusion.
Table tennis as a sport has a unique value where people from different ages, gender, skills or physical condition can play together for pure enjoyment or for competition.
Hence, this is a day for people who love table tennis to spread their love for the sport and also to get people interested in it as well. This is called World Table Tennis Day!
History of World Table Tennis Day
Table tennis, also called ping pong, originated during Victorian England where it was originally played as a parlor game. The term “ping-pong” was used as a catchy phrase by the company J. Jaques & Son Ltd and hence was trademarked by them in 1901.
Back in 1926, the International Table Tennis Foundation was founded by Henry Lawes from Wymondham, England. Its founding members were from nine different countries including Denmark, Czechoslovakia, India and Sweden. This organization continues to be the governing body for this sport, with 226 member Associations throughout the world.
One of the fundamental missions of The International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) is to promote table tennis globally, with the effort to encourage the sport to be played in each corner of the world. To accomplish this mission, ITTF created ITTF Development to make the sport accessible to everyone, even those in less privileged areas of the world.
Table tennis was rather slow to become a competitive sport, but 1926 saw the first World Table Tennis Championships played in London and they have been played annually ever since. It wasn’t until 1988 when the summer Olympics included ping pong as an official event for the first time.
Table Tennis has since honed its rules. When the 2000 Olympics in Sydney took place, they implemented rules for players to join for competition and, since then, organizations like the International Table Tennis Federation have promoted and taken table tennis to a whole new level.
One of the largest changes made in the playing of Table Tennis occurred when the official rules changed the scoring system. What had been a 21-point scoring system for 75 years was changed to a system where the first person to score 11 points wins the game. The only exception to this rule is if each player has 10 points and then the player needs to win by 2 points.
In 2015, ITTF created World Table Tennis Day to get people interested in this competitive sport. It has been promoting and celebrating the day since then so that even more people can learn about and enjoy this sport.
Since then, ITTF developed a Table Tennis for ALL program with the aim to make the sport popular, universal and inclusive. The term “ALL” means more people, but not only that, also different kinds of people in terms of age, gender, social status, culture and physical ability.
Though it used to be celebrated on the same day as the International Day of Sport for Development and Peace, World Table Tennis Day has since moved to April 23, the birthday of Ivor Montagu, who was the original president of the ITTF and organized the first ever World Table Tennis Championships.
Now it’s time to consider fun and exciting ways to celebrate and enjoy World Table Tennis Day!
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