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International Table Tennis Federation

International table tennis governing body

International Table Tennis Federation

Summary

International table tennis governing body

FieldValue
nameInternational Table Tennis Federation
imageITTF.svg
size220px
abbreviationITTF
founderWilliam Henry Lawes
founding_locationLondon, United Kingdom
typeSports federation
formation
headquartersLausanne, Switzerland
membership227 member associations
leader_titlePresident
leader_namePetra Sörling
website

The International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) is the governing body for national table tennis associations that use ITTF-approved sponge table tennis rackets. The federation oversees rules and regulations, seeks technological improvement for the sport, and organizes numerous international competitions, including the World Table Tennis Championships.

Founding history

The ITTF was founded on 12 December 1926 in London by William Henry Lawes from Wymondham, the nine founding members being Austria, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, England, Germany, Hungary, British India, Sweden, and Wales. 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. This increased the ball's air resistance, and effectively slowed down the game. In 2003, the ITTF moved its headquarters from Hastings to Lausanne and set the ITTF Museum there.

In 2007, the governance for para table tennis was transferred from the International Paralympic Committee to the ITTF. In 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 was to encourage associations to develop their own players.

In 2019, the ITTF created its subsidiary World Table Tennis (WTT) to manage all its commercial and events business. The ITTF's current headquarters are located in Lausanne while their Asia-Pacific office is based in Singapore and search for a new site for headquarters is in the process. The current president is Petra Sörling from Sweden. Sörling became the eighth person to hold the office in 2021.

PresidentCountryPresidency
Ivor MontaguEngland1926–1937 (as chairman)
1937–1967 (as president)
Roy EvansWales1967–1987
Ichiro OgimuraJapan1987–1994
Lollo HammarlundSweden1994–1995
Xu YinshengChina1995–1999
Adham ShararaCanada1999–2014
Thomas WeikertGermany2014–2021
Petra SörlingSweden2021–

Membership

The ITTF recognises five continental federations. There are currently 227 member associations within the ITTF.

ContinentMembersContinental federation
Africa54African Table Tennis Federation
America46Pan American Table Tennis Confederation
Asia45Asian Table Tennis Union (ATTU)
Europe58European Table Tennis Union (ETTU)
Oceania24Oceania Table Tennis Federation (OTTF)

Organisational structure

All member associations of the ITTF attend annual general meeting (AGM). 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 five 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 recognised the Table Tennis Federation of Kosovo in 2003 even though Kosovo was excluded from most other sports. It recognised the People's Republic of China in 1953 and allowed some basic diplomacy which lead to an opening for U.S. President Richard Nixon, called "Ping Pong Diplomacy", in the early 1970s.

The ITTF also approved unified Korean team to compete at the World Table Tennis Championships in 1991 and 2018.

In reaction to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the ITTF banned Russian and Belarusian players and officials from its competitions. But this reaction has slowed down in 30 March 2023, stated that Russian and Belarusian players will be re-allowed to participate ITTF and WTT competitions under strict conditions of neutrality, with government or state officials, and national symbols such as flags and anthems of both countries to continue being banned in ITTF-sanctioned events.

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. The player will be eligible to play for the new association after three, five, seven years after the date of registration, if the player is under the age of 15, 18, 21 respectively. The player will be eligible to play for the new association after nine years if the player is at least 21 years old.

Service and point system

The table tennis point system was reduced from a 21 to an 11-point scoring system in 2001. 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, 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

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.

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

ITTF tournaments

Main article: Major achievements in table tennis by nation

ITTF world ranking in men's singles

The ITTF and its subsidiary WTT hold international tournaments and the ITTF maintains official world ranking lists based on players' results in tournaments throughout the year.

Conventions: MT/WT: men's/women's team; MS/WS: men's/women's singles; MD/WD: men's/women's doubles; XD: mixed doubles; XT: mixed teams

Major International Events

Competition nameFirst heldHeld everyEventsMTWTMSWSMDWDXDXT
World Championships1926Odd-numbered year
World Team Championships1926Even-numbered year
Summer Olympic Games1988Four years
Table Tennis World Cup1980Annually

;Junior events

Competition nameFirst heldHeld everyEventsMTWTMSWSMDWDXD
World Youth Championships2003One year
Summer Youth Olympic Games2010Four years

;Para events

Competition nameFirst heldHeld everyEventsMTWTMSWSMDWDXD
Summer Paralympic Games1960Four years
World Para Table Tennis Championships1990Four years

Ranking method

;Singles

Main article: ITTF World Ranking

WTT Feeder125904525158

ITTF Museum

The ITTF Museum was previously in Lausanne, Switzerland, where the ITTF is based. The ITTF decided in 2014 to move the museum to Shanghai, China, which was planning the China Table Tennis Museum around the same time. The new museum was designated in the same building with the China Table Tennis Museum on different floors, managed and operated by Shanghai University of Sport, and officially opened in 2018.

References

References

  1. "Home".
  2. (15 December 2020). "ETTU congratulates ITTF on 94th anniversary".
  3. "ITTF Archives".
  4. "ITTF Table Tennis Timeline".
  5. (2010). "The Table Tennis Collector No. 56".
  6. (17 May 2013). "ITTF museum to be moved to China from Switzerland".
  7. "The ITTF Classification Code". ITTF.
  8. "New Rule in Favour of the Development of Table Tennis". Ittf.com.
  9. (23 January 2021). "World Table Tennis established with good governance".
  10. (19 February 2019). "ITTF invite cities to bid to house new headquarters and international training centre".
  11. (15 January 2020). "Twenty-eight cities declare interest in being home to ITTF headquarters".
  12. (28 July 2022). "ITTF resumes search for new headquarters, will name inaugural summit host next month".
  13. (24 September 2014). "Weikert becomes new ITTF President".
  14. (25 November 2021). "Petra Sörling elected ITTF President unopposed".
  15. "ITTF Handbook".
  16. "Continental Reports".
  17. "History – ITTF Americas".
  18. (1 March 2022). "Welcome the Falkland Islands, 227th member".
  19. "ITTF Directory".
  20. "ITTF Organisational Structure".
  21. (21 May 2003). "New members of the ITTF".
  22. (14 October 2007). "Kosovar athletes stage Olympic Protest".
  23. (1953-03-23). "ITTF Archives: 1953 Bucarest AGM Minutes". ITTF.
  24. (19 April 2018). "Inter-Korean Joint Team at 1991 World Table Tennis Championships".
  25. (4 May 2018). "North and South Korea teams unite at table tennis world championships". CNN.
  26. (2 March 2022). "FIL joins list of International Federations to ban Russia from events".
  27. (30 March 2023). "ITTF Statement on the Participation of Players with a Russian or Belarusian Passport".
  28. "ITTF Handbook 2022".
  29. Colin Clemett. "Rules Evolution". ITTF.
  30. (2008-11-24). "Official Message to Table Tennis Manufacturers And National Associations". ITTF.
  31. "Rankings".
  32. [https://www.uol.com.br/esporte/futebol/ultimas-noticias/gazeta-esportiva/2024/08/06/mesmo-sem-medalha-no-individual-hugo-calderano-sobe-no-ranking-do-tenis-de-mesa.htm Mesmo sem medalha no individual, Hugo Calderano sobe no ranking do tênis de mesa]
  33. [https://worldtabletennis.com/eventInfo?selectedTab=Event%20Info&eventTab=Ranking%20Points%20and%20Prize%20Money%20Breakdown&eventId=2660 World Championships singles points]
  34. [https://www.ittf.com/tournament/2937/ittf-mens-and-womens-world-cup-macao-2024/#information Table Tennis World Cup]
  35. [https://www.hugocalderano.com/hugo-pronto-copa-do-mundo/ Copa do Mundo de Tênis de Mesa: Tudo o que você precisa saber]
  36. [https://worldtabletennis.com/eventInfo?selectedTab=Event%20Info&eventTab=Ranking%20Points%20and%20Prize%20Money%20Breakdown&eventId=2866 Grand Finals singles points]
  37. [https://worldtabletennis.com/eventInfo?selectedTab=Event%20Info&eventTab=Ranking%20Points%20and%20Prize%20Money%20Breakdown&eventId=2932 Grand Smash Singles Points]
  38. [https://worldtabletennis.com/eventInfo?selectedTab=Event%20Info&eventTab=Ranking%20Points%20and%20Prize%20Money%20Breakdown&eventId=2899 WTT Champions singles points]
  39. [https://worldtabletennis.com/eventInfo?selectedTab=Event%20Info&eventTab=Ranking%20Points%20and%20Prize%20Money%20Breakdown&eventId=2862 WTT Star Contender singles points]
  40. [https://worldtabletennis.com/eventInfo?eventId=2867&selectedTab=Event%20Info&eventTab=Ranking%20Points%20and%20Prize%20Money%20Breakdown WTT Contender singles points]
  41. [https://www.hugocalderano.com/campeonato-pan-americano-tudo-o-que-voce-precisa-saber-4/ Campeonato Pan-Americano: Tudo o que você precisa saber]
  42. [https://worldtabletennis.com/eventInfo?selectedTab=Event%20Info&eventTab=Ranking%20Points%20and%20Prize%20Money%20Breakdown&eventId=2878 WTT Feeder singles points]
  43. (30 March 2018). "World-class pingpong museum showcases the best of the sport".
  44. (April 2018). "Table Tennis History Journal Special Edition".
  45. (1 April 2018). "Legendary players attend Shanghai opening of ITTF Museum".
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