History of U.S. Table Tennis - Volume 16

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CHAPTER FIVE 1988: March Tournaments. Dave Williams (TTT, June-July, 1988, 67) reports on an unusual Southern California exhibition match: “The Orange Coast College Table Tennis Club played host to an exhibition match between the Southern California All-Stars and a visiting team of Japanese Collegiate Champions. The match, held Mar. 24th at the Basil Peterson Gym on the campus of Orange Coast College, was played on three Stiga tables under excellent tournament conditions. “The Japanese team consisted of four men (Toshiaki Okamoto, Susumu Sato, Koji Matsushita, and Kiyonobu Iwasaki) and two women (Hiroko Yamaya and Asako Tsuchikawa). “Accompanying the JCC team were Manager Manji Fukushima [the 1967 U.S. Open Champion]; Yoshinari Takeyama, Director of the Japan University Table Tennis Federation; Koichi Ito, Chief Secretary of the Japan University TTF; and Suguru Araki, JTTA liaison to the United States. Representing the Californians were Masuru Hashimoto, Rutledge Barry, Najib Yakub, and Attila Malek. Lan Vuong and Wei Wang represented the women. Despite the short notice of the exhibition and the fact that no All-Stars trained specifically for this event, all [sic] made a good showing. [Perhaps, but, though the women lost only 1 game, won 9, the men won only 1 game, lost 17]. Koji Matsushita, World #54, and former Afghanistan National Champion Najib Yakub provided one of the many outstanding displays of contrasting styles, with Matsushita chopping back Najib’s persistent, hard-hitting loop-drive attacks. Najib, a veteran of much international play who received most of his early training and encouragement from his brother Karim Amiri (also a former Afghan National Champion), felt that ‘the Japanese Collegiate Champions exhibited fine discipline and sound technique from their regular training regimen,’ and that ‘camaraderie between fellow team members and their coaching staff was evident, contributing to their winning spirit and performance.’ “Quick, sharp offensive play characterized both sides of the women’s matches. “Mixing high loops to augment her attacks, Lan Vuong played well even without a warm-up. “Emphasizing the aggressive play of Yamaya and Tsuchikawa, Wei Wang noted that ‘the Japanese women attacked all serves,’ necessitating counterdrives to continue rallies. The California women’s resourceful play and precise counter-hits from both forehand and backhand proved too much for the visitors.” Kelly Boyce (TTT, Apr.-May, 1988, 19) covers the Mar. 5th Tulsa, OK Winter Open for us: “The Tulsa TTC, sponsoring its umpteenth tournament in 17 years [and how many of those were written up in Topics?], had a record turnout of 60 players playing on seven well-lit


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History of U.S. Table Tennis - Volume 16 by Sean O'Neill - Issuu