International Table Tennis Federation

International Table Tennis Federation
Abbreviation ITTF
Formation 1926
Type Sports federation
Headquarters Lausanne, Switzerland
Membership
218 member associations
President
Thomas Weikert
Website www.ittf.com

The International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) is the governing body for all international table tennis associations.[1] The role of the ITTF includes overseeing rules and regulations and seeking technological improvement for the sport of table tennis. The ITTF is responsible for the organization of numerous international competitions, including the World Table Tennis Championships that has continued since 1926.

Founding history

The ITTF was founded in 1926 by, the nine founding members being Austria, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, England, Germany, Hungary, India, Sweden and Wales.[2] The first international tournament was held in January 1926 in Berlin while the first World Table Tennis Championships was held in December 1926 in London.

Toward the end of 2000, the ITTF instituted several rules changes aimed at making table tennis more viable as a televised spectator sport. The older 38 mm balls were officially replaced by 40 mm balls.[3] This increased the ball's air resistance and effectively slowed down the game.

On 29 February 2008, the ITTF announced several rules changes after an ITTF Executive Meeting in Guangzhou, Guangdong, China with regards to a player's eligibility to play for a new association. The new ruling is to encourage associations to develop their own players.[4]

The headquarters of the ITTF is in Lausanne, Switzerland. The current president of the ITTF is Adham Sharara, from Canada.

Membership

Continental Federations

The ITTF recognises six continental federations.[5] Each continental federation has a president as its top official and owns its constitution.[6] The following are recognised federations:

Continent Members Continental Federation
Africa 48 African Table Tennis Federation (ATTF)
Asia 45 Asian Table Tennis Union (ATTU)
Europe 57 European Table Tennis Union (ETTU)
Latin America 40 Latin American Table Tennis Union (ULTM)
Northern America 4 Northern American Table Tennis Union (NATTU)
Oceania 24 Oceania Table Tennis Federation (OTTF)

National Federations

There are currently 218 member associations within the ITTF.[5]

Organisational Structure

All member associations of the ITTF attend annual general meeting (AGM).[6] Agendas on changes of the constitution, laws of table tennis, applications for membership etc. are discussed and finalised through votes. Also, the president of ITTF, 8 executive vice-presidents, and 32 or less continental representatives are elected at an AGM, serving for a four-year term. The president, executive vice-presidents, and the chairman of the athletes' commission compose executive committee.

The executive committee, continental representatives and presidents of the six continental federations or their appointees compose the board of directors (Board). The Board manages the work of the ITTF between AGMs. Several committees, commissions, working groups or panels work under the constitution of ITTF or under the Board.

Role in diplomacy

Unlike the organisations for more popular sports, the ITTF tends to recognise teams from generally unrecognised governing bodies for disputed territory. For example, it currently recognises the Table Tennis Federation of Kosovo even though Kosovo is excluded from most other sports. It recognised the People's Republic of China in 1953 and allowed some basic diplomacy[7][8] which lead to an opening for U.S. President Richard Nixon, called "Ping Pong Diplomacy", in the early 1970s.

Rules

Player eligibility

For ITTF World Title events, a player is eligible to play for his association by registering with the ITTF. If the player chooses to play for a new association, he shall register with the ITTF, through the new association.[9]

Service and point system

The table tennis point system was reduced from a 21 to an 11-point scoring system in 2001.[3] A game shall be won by the player or pair first scoring 11 points unless both players or pairs score 10 points, when the game shall be won by the first player or pair subsequently gaining a lead of 2 points. This was intended to make games more fast-paced and exciting. The ITTF also changed the rules on service to prevent a player from hiding the ball during service,[10] in order to increase the average length of rallies and to reduce the server's advantage. Today, the game changes from time to time mainly to improve on the excitement for television viewers.

Speed glue ban

See also: Speed glue

In 2007, ITTF's board of directors in Zagreb decided to implement the VOC-free glue rule at Junior events, starting from 1 January 2008, as a transitional period before the full implementation of the VOC ban on 1 September 2008.[11]

As of 1 January 2009, all speed glue was to have been banned.

Contests

Current ITTF events and Olympic Games:[12]

Competition name First held Held every ITTF ranking[13] Events[a]
RankingBonusMTWTMSWSMDWDXD
Olympic Games 1988 Four years R1 B1
World Championships 1926 Odd-numbered year R1 B1
World Team Championships 1926 Even-numbered year R1
Men's World Cup 1980 One year R1 B2
Women's World Cup 1996 One year R1 B2
World Team Cup 1990 Odd-numbered year R1
China vs. World Challenge 2009 One year R2
ITTF World Tour 1996 One year R2 B3
ITTF World Tour Grand Finals 1996 One year R2 B2
Youth Olympic Games 2010 Four years R1 B3
World Junior Championships 2003 One year R1 B3
ITTF Global Junior Circuit 1992 One year R2 B4
ITTF Global Cadet Challenge 2003 One year R2 B4
ITTF Para table tennis world championships 1990 Four year

a. ^ MT/WT: Men's/Women's Teams; MS/WS: Men's/Women's Singles; MD/WD: Men's/Women's Doubles; XD: Mixed Doubles

ITTF world ranking

The ITTF keeps an updated ranking considering the results of all the aforementioned and other recognized competitions. The following table shows the top 20 players considering the current ITTF world ranking.

Men
# Name Points Move
1 China Xu Xin 2998 Increase1
2 China Ma Long 2982 Decrease1
3 China Fan Zhendong 2954 Increase1
4 China Zhang Jike 2909 Decrease1
5 China Wang Hao 2721 Steady
6 Japan Jun Mizutani 2665 Increase1
7 Germany Dimitrij Ovtcharov 2610 Decrease1
8 Template:Flagicolknn Chuang Chih-yuan 2556 Steady
9 Germany Timo Boll 2548 Increase24
10 China Yan An 2542 Increase2
11 China Wang Liqin 2530 Decrease2
12 Belarus Vladimir Samsonov 2512 Decrease2
13 China Hao Shuai 2479 Steady
14 China Ma Lin 2469 Decrease3
15 South Korea Joo Se-Hyuk 2432 Decrease1
16 Singapore Gao Ning 2414 Decrease1
17 China Chen Qi 2389 Decrease1
18 Denmark Michael Maze 2364 Decrease1
19 Japan Koki Niwa 2357 Steady
20 Portugal Marcos Freitas 2349 Increase2

Women
# Name Points Move
1 China Ding Ning 3183 Steady
2 China Li Xiaoxia 3177 Increase1
3 China Liu Shiwen 3155 Decrease1
4 Singapore Feng Tianwei 2875 Steady
5 China Zhu Yuling 2823 Steady
6 China Guo Yan 2821 unranked
7 Spain Shen Yanfei 2725 Steady
8 China Wu Yang 2720 Decrease2
9 China Chen Meng 2716 Decrease1
10 China Feng Yalan 2690 Increase2
11 Japan Kasumi Ishikawa 2678 Decrease2
12 China Guo Yue 2664 Increase2
13 Hong Kong Jiang Huajun 2660 Decrease2
14 Japan Ai Fukuhara 2650 Decrease1
15 Belarus Viktoria Pavlovich 2630 Decrease2
16 South Korea Kim Kyung-ah 2628 Decrease6
17 South Korea Seok Ha-jung 2600 Increase1
18 South Korea Seo Hyo-won 2595 Decrease2
19 Romania Elizabeta Samara 2574 Steady
20 Netherlands Li Jiao 2560 Increase4

Updated on July 5, 2013 at ittf.com

See also

References

  1. "Official ITTF website".
  2. "ITTF Archives".
  3. 3.0 3.1 "ITTF Table Tennis Timeline".
  4. "New Rule in Favour of the Development of Table Tennis". Ittf.com. Retrieved 2012-12-26.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "ITTF Directory".
  6. 6.0 6.1 "ITTF Handbook 2012/2013". ITTF. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  7. McCurry, Justin (2008-05-06). "Ping-pong diplomacy back on table as Chinese premier visits Japan". The Guardian. Retrieved 2008-05-30.
  8. "ITTF Archives: 1953 Bucarest AGM Minutes". ITTF. 1953-03-23. p. 2. Retrieved 2010-07-17. Only the People's Republic of China Table Tennis Association was taken at this stage, in order to regularise their playing in the Championships and attending Congress. The Meeting confirmed the Advisory Committee's action in accepting the application.
  9. "Information about the Eligibility Rule". ITTF. 2008-10-13.
  10. Colin Clemett. "Rules Evolution" (PDF). ITTF. p. 9. Retrieved 2010-07-27.
  11. "Official Message to Table Tennis Manufacturers And National Associations" (PDF). ITTF. 2008-11-24.
  12. "ITTF Calendar". ITTF. Retrieved 2010-07-27.
  13. "Policy for Inclusion in the ITTF World Ranking" (PDF). ITTF. Retrieved 2010-06-21.

External links

Coordinates: 46°31′56″N 6°35′44″E / 46.532134°N 6.595596°E