Amalraj highlights need for professional table tennis leagues in the country

headlines4Sports9 months ago1.6K Views

More the merrier: Amalraj said setting up leagues will boost the player pools across States.

More the merrier: Amalraj mentioned establishing leagues will enhance the participant swimming pools throughout States.
| Photo Credit: FILE PHOTO: RITU RAJ KONWAR

Former India table tennis participant Anthony Amalraj, talking at the launch of the fourth version of the Table Tennis Super League (TTSL) right here on Wednesday, highlighted the need for professional leagues to develop the sport in India.

“In Europe, we’ve always had a league system. But in India, we mostly had a tournament system, and there’s a huge difference between the two. In a tournament, if you lose once, you’re out — it’s over.

“But in a league, players get chances to bounce back, to take advice, and to improve. Financial stress is also lower in leagues because of sponsor support,” Amalraj mentioned.

The TTSL is Ultimate Table Tennis’ (UTT) grassroots improvement match. The Tamil Nadu version will function six groups — Jeppiar Jaguars, Leo Legends, DRA Dragons, SSVM Smashers, Vibe Victors, and E Daddy Warriors.

Amalraj added that Indian gamers’ performances have improved since the creation of the UTT.

“Leagues are more professional. Since UTT started in 2017, India’s performance has seen a shift — our women’s team reached the Olympic quarterfinals, and now Indian players have the confidence to take on top nations like China and Japan,” he mentioned.

A silver-medallist from the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, Amalraj mentioned that establishing such leagues will enhance the participant swimming pools throughout States.

“Only Sathiyan from Tamil Nadu made it to the World Championships this time.

“But see, we’re not like China, where lakhs of people play table tennis. It’s not like asking, ‘when will we get the next Virat Kohli in cricket?’ Because lakhs play cricket, you have a bigger pool. In table tennis, the player base is smaller. It takes time. After I came, Sathiyan came 3–4 years later. So it’s a gradual process,” he added.

0 Votes: 0 Upvotes, 0 Downvotes (0 Points)

Follow
Loading

Signing-in 3 seconds...

Signing-up 3 seconds...