Table Tennis Timeline
Timeline of Table Tennis Milestones
with thanks to the late Ron Crayden (ENG)
and his book, The Story of Table Tennis - the first 100 years
with updates by the ITTF Museum
1880s
Adaption of lawn tennis to the dining table with improvised equipment
1890s
Several patents registered in England and the USA
Manufactured sets produced under trade names such as Gossima, and Indoor Tennis, with Lawn Tennis style rules
1900
Introduction of celluloid balls to replace rubber and cork ones. The celluloid ball had the perfect bounce, and the game became a huge success
1901
Table Tennis Association and rival Ping Pong Association formed in England; amalgamated in 1903
First books on the game published in England
The game is introduced in China via western settlements
1904
Ping Pong craze fades, some pockets of popularity in eastern Europe continue
1922
Revival of the game in Europe, though laws varied
Establishment of standard laws of the Game in England
1926
International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) initiated in Berlin
First World Championships held in London, England. ITTF Constitution adopted, along with first set of standardized Laws.
Ivor Montagu (ENG) elected first President (Chairman)
1920s –
1950s
Classic Hard Bat Era (European Dominance)
1926–
1931
Maria Mednyanszky (HUN) wins the World Championships five times consecutively. Mednyansky wins 18 gold medals over-all
1930–
1935
Victor Barna (HUN) becomes five times world champion and is runner-up 1931 losing the final against his compatriot Miklos Szabados. Barna wins a record 22 gold medals at world championships during his career, 40 medals overall
1936
Tenth World Championships held in Prague, Czechoslovakia. The longest rally took place, the first point taking over two hours
1939
First continental association formed: South America
First World Championship held outside Europe: Cairo, Egypt
1950–
1955
Angelica Rozeanu-Adelstein (ROU) wins the World Championships six times in a row and is the last non Asian to win the female singles title until today
1950s –
1970s
Age of Sponge Bat and Technology (Beginning of Asian Dominance)
1952
Nineteenth World Championships held in Bombay, India The first to be staged in Asia and Japan’s entry to the international scene
Hiroji Satoh (JPN) became the first player to win a World Championship when using a racket covered with thick sponge and is the first non-European winner
Inauguration of the Asian Federation & First Asian Federation Championships
1953
China entered the World Championships for the first time
1954
Ichiro Ogimura (JPN) is the epitome of Japanese dominance with technological development and physical training
1956
Tomie Okada-Okawa (JPN) is the first female player from Asia to win the World Championships and stops the European reign on world’s female table tennis.
1957
World Championship changes to a two-year cycle
1958
First European Championships, Budapest, Hungary. The USSR made their entry to the international scene
1959
Rong Guotuan (CHN) is the first Chinese world champion in any sport
Racket standardization laws enacted
1962
First All-Africa Championships, Alexandria, Egypt
1967
Ivor Montagu retired as President of the ITTF after forty years in office
1971
First Commonwealth Championships held in Singapore
Ping Pong Diplomacy: table tennis played an important role in international diplomacy when several teams were invited to China for a series of friendship matches after the 1971 World Championships. Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai: “Your visit to China has opened the door for people-to-people exchanges between China and the USA.”
1971
Stellan Bengtsson (SWE) wins the men’s singles title and heralds the start of three decades of Swedish influence, with top players such as Kjell Johansson, Mikael Appelgren, Erik Lindh, Jan-Ove Waldner, Jörgen Persson, and Peter Karlsson.
1973
First World University Championships held in Hanover, Germany
1977
ITTF received formal declaration of its recognition by the International Olympic Committee (IOC)
1979
First European Championships for Paraplegics (wheelchair players) held in Stoke Mandeville, England
1980
First World Cup held in Hong Kong
1981
World Championships held in Nova Sad, Yugoslavia. Total triumph for China, whose athletes win all of the seven gold medals
Table tennis admitted to the Olympic programme (84th session IOC)
1982
First World Veterans’ Championships held in Gothenburg, Sweden
First World Championships for the disabled held in Stoke Mandeville, England
1985
European Youth Championships held in The Hague, Holland
Modern Olympics Era (Chinese Reign with few exceptions)
1988
For the very first time, table tennis was featured in the Olympic Games that were held in Seoul, South Korea
1992
Former World champion, Jan-Ove Waldner (SWE) became Olympic singles champion and reputedly, the first table tennis millionaire
1995
World Championships held in Tianjin, China. Total triumph for China for the second time, winning seven gold medals
1996
Beginning of the ITTF Pro Tour, with events taking place all around the world
2000
After the Olympics in Sydney, the ball size is increased to 40mm for improved television viewing
2001
Game score changed from 21 to 11 points World Championships held in Osaka, Japan. Total triumph for China for the third time, winning all of the seven gold medals
2002
Implementation of the ITTF World Junior Circuit (U18) and World Cadet Challenge (U15 continental team competition)
2003
First ITTF World Junior Championships in Santiago, Chile
Team Championships separated from individual events, held in alternate years
2004
During the Olympic Games in Athens, Table Tennis ranked 5th among all sports for television viewing audience
2005
World Championships held in Shanghai, China. Total triumph again for China, winning all of the five gold medals.
2006
World Championships held in Bremen, Germany. The Chinese athletes complete the collection with two gold medals in the team events
2007
World Championships held in Zagreb, Croatia. Total triumph number five for China, winning all of the five gold medals
First appearance of table tennis as a compulsory sport at the Universiade in Bangkok, Thailand
2008
China sweeps the Team championships in Guangzhou
China wins all the Gold at the Beijing Olympic Games
2010
Table tennis is part of the first Youth Olympic Games
source: http://www.ittf.com/...
just for the sake of TT lovers out there!!
More Power to the Group...
Snake