Shanghai Daily news

Shanghai-born world champion Wang Liqin in a practice
session earlier this week for the 2005 Table Tennis World Championships
which begin in the city on Saturday. Wang is currently ranked No. 1 in the world
in men¡¯s singles and will be competing in the men¡¯s singles, doubles and mixed
doubles. (Photo: Shanghai Daily)

Xu
Zhifang, 85, in action during a table tennis competition in Shanghai
last
month. More than 500 amateur players participated in the event, part of
the
warm-up for the 2005 Table Tennis World Championships which kicks off on
Saturday. (Photo: Shanghai Daily)
The best players in the world are coming to Shanghai for the
Table Tennis World Championships but many eyes will be on some of the sideline
matches where local amateurs, young and old, take on the great champions of the
past, writes Zhou Zuyi.
Dressed in blue-and-white-striped jogging pants
and a gray-colored cardigan, Xu Zhifang fits the image of an ordinary senior
morning exercise enthusiast, one of the many who can be seen on most Shanghai
streets at dawn. But this would be a false impression.
The chosen exercise
of the retired printing technician requires much more skill than that needed for
the punching-against-the-air activity indulged in by many of his fellow local
elders.
In fact, the 85-year-old exercises in a different, and much more
effective, way: he plays competitive table tennis.
``I have been a paddler
for more than half a century,'' says Xu, who has become something of a household
name in Shanghai for his combination of age and table tennis skill.
The
veteran registered himself as the oldest competitor in a widely publicized mass
table tennis competition last month with the winners earning the chance to grab
a big share of the limelight at the upcoming extravaganza surrounding the 2005
Table Tennis World Championship which starts this weekend.
More than 500
amateur paddlers competed last month in six age groups and the champion of each
group will go paddle-to-paddle against former Chinese world champions in
matches, part of the blue-ribbon event scheduled to run from Saturday through
May 6.
``I didn't aspire for the honor to play against former world
champions. I signed up just to enjoy the game and be part of the grand
occasion,'' says Xu. ``You couldn't miss the chance as the world championships
don't come to your doorstep all that often.''
In fact, Xu is just a small
part of the WTTC fanfare that has been going on in Shanghai over the past couple
of months. Waves of pre-event promotions have been banging the drum to herald
the most prestigious contest in what is regarded as China's ``national sport.''
Table tennis, also known as ping pong, may trail behind such sports as
soccer in terms of popularity in China but the country takes enormous pride in
the prowess of its players who are the world's best when it comes to belting the
2.7-gram celluloid sphere.
Ever since the late Rong Guotuan, a landmark
figure in Chinese table tennis history, broke through by taking the men's
singles crown at the 1959 world championship in Germany, China has piled up an
awesome total of 95 gold medals in the biannual world championships.
``In
the 1970s and 1980s, ping pong was the prime sport and the favorite leisure
activity of Chinese,'' says Duan Xiang, a member of the technical committee of
the Chinese Table Tennis Association and a native of Shanghai.
Old Xu used
to hone his playing skills at a table tennis club housed in the Great World
Entertainment complex on Xizang Road, a venue where he ran into some of biggest
names in the sport.
``Xu Yinsheng, in his teens then, was obviously absorbed
in the game: he often played into the small hours,'' Xu says, referring to the
multiple world champion and the former International Table Tennis Federation
chief who is a father figure in Chinese table tennis. ``We didn't talk much with
each other. We just played, on and on.''
Xu Yinsheng is just one example --
albeit the most outstanding one -- of more than a dozen world champion Shanghai
paddlers. The top 16 in the sport over the years span generations of paddlers
and they have given Shanghai the reputation of being ``the cradle of Chinese
table tennis heroes.''
According to the Shanghai Table Tennis Association, up
to 60 local primary schools and high schools are involved in a youth development
program with ping pong forming part of the students' physical education course.
Many factories and government agencies have their own amateur table tennis teams
and have regular outings in tournaments every year.
All six group winners in
the mass table tennis competition last month came from this background and many
believe their matches will be a highlight of the world championships next
week.
Chances are that Shanghai again will see a local hero take center stage
at the Shanghai Grand Stage on May 6, the final day of the WTTC because Wang
Liqin, the reigning world No.1 men's singles player and 2001 World Champion, is
the red-hot favorite to win the most coveted of the five trophies on offer.
``Technically speaking, he's flawless,'' says Duan. ``But the home advantage
could work against Wang as all eyes will be on him and so will the pressure.
This could present a formidable challenge.''
Ironically, Xu, the old man,
doesn't have an opinion about the drama surrounding the title. All he cares
about is the game itself -- how he's going to balance it with his ordinary daily
routine next week.
``I am still looking for someone to take care of my ailing
wife during the tournament,'' says Xu. ``For me, next week will involve nothing
but table tennis.''