World number one Zhang Jike leads China’s table tennis juggernaut at the London Olympics but a medals clean sweep is out of reach due to new rules that give rivals a share of the glory. The Chinese achieved table tennis perfection at the 2008 Games in Beijing, sweeping both singles podiums and winning the team titles — fuelling fears that their iron grip was damaging interest in the sport.
Since table tennis joined the Olympic programme in 1988, China have taken 20 of the 24 available golds, including all four at Atlanta 1996 and Sydney 2000. And the sport’s top administrator said this week in London that the “devastating” Chinese had widened the gap still further since Beijing. “The current situation is actually worse than in Beijing — worse in the sense that the difference in technical level between the Chinese and the rest of the world has grown even further,” said International Table Tennis Federation president Adham Sharara.
“This is good for the Chinese, but devastating for the rest,” he added. “The Chinese are expected to win everything, so even within China the public is crying for a meaningful foreign challenge. This is not on the immediate horizon.” His comments follow a warning from veteran Hungarian player Krisztina Toth that the Olympic tournament risked being a “boring” spectacle because of Asian dominance. China’s power — demonstrated yet again by their men’s and women’s titles at the world team championships in Germany this year — has long led to concerns over the sport’s public appeal. But in London there will be at least two non-Chinese paddlers on the singles podiums, after each country was limited to just two entrants. There are also men’s and women’s team events at the ExCel venue in London’s Docklands.