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The 2017 ITTF Men's World Cup was a table tennis competition held in Liège, Belgium, from 20 to 22 October 2017. It was the 38th edition of the ITTF-sanctioned event, and the fourth time that it had been staged in Belgium. [1] In the final, Germany's Dimitrij Ovtcharov defeated fellow German Timo Boll, 4–2, to win his first World Cup title. [2]
The 40 teams were drawn into eight groups of five teams. After a round robin in each group, the top team advanced to the round of 16, while the second and third-placed teams played in the round of 24, in the knockout stage. A team match consisted of five singles matches, where each singles match was decided in best-of-5 games. [3]
April 15–21: 2024 ITTF Men's World Cup in Macao. Winners: Ma Long; April 15–21: 2024 ITTF Women's World Cup in Macao. Winners: Sun Yingsha; December 1–8: 2024 ITTF Mixed Team World Cup in Chengdu. Mixed Team: : China: South Korea: Hong Kong 4th: Romania; Youth. November 22–29: 2024 ITTF World Youth Championships in Helsingborg [1]
The men's team tournament of the 2022 World Team Table Tennis Championships was held from 30 September to 9 October 2022. [1] ... Round of 16 2 Belgium: 3 2 1 7 4 +3 5 3
The Table Tennis World Cup has been held annually since 1980. There had only been men's singles until the start of women's singles in 1996 and team competitions in 1990. The team competitions were canceled until the relaunch in 2007, and now held in odd-numbered years.
Pages in category "Table tennis competitions in Belgium" ... 2017 ITTF Men's World Cup This page was last edited on 20 December 2021, at 12:19 (UTC). ...
Corbillon Cup for women's team, donated in 1933 by Marcel Corbillon, president of the French Table Tennis Association. The original Cup was won by German team in 1939, and disappeared during Berlin occupation after World War II; the current Corbillon Cup is a replica made in 1949.
From 2015, the number of players qualifying for both the men's and women's events was increased to 16, and the tournament's name was changed to the Europe Top 16. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] Sweden's Jan-Ove Waldner is the most successful player in the history of the men's event, winning the tournament seven times and finishing runner-up on a further four ...