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New Zealand Table Tennis Association Inc
was formed in 1934,
but the game was played in NZ well before then.
These pages record images from earlier years.

page updated:24-Jul-13


The Beginnings of Table Tennis
Table Tennis began in England. The game, and to begin with it was only a game and not a sport, was born in the 1880's when adherents of lawn tennis adapted their pastime to be played indoors during the winter months. "Whiff-Waff" and "Ping Pong" were just two of a number of games patented in England during the 1890's, and sold with simple rules. "Gossamer" was another early name for the game from which Table Tennis evolved.

Early equipment consisted of rubber or cork balls, and bats made of dried animal skins stretched over a wooden frame.

NZ's first tournament in 1902
The game's popularity rose steadily, sometimes dramatically, and by 1901 table tennis tournaments were being organised, associations had been formed, and books on the game had been published. An unofficial "World Championship" was held in 1902. The "parlour game" of table tennis was rapidly assuming the status of a serious sport. The game's popularity rose steadily, sometimes dramatically, and by 1901 table tennis tournaments were being organised, associations had been formed, and books on the game had been published.
An unofficial "World Championship" was held in 1902. The "parlour game" of table tennis was rapidly assuming the status of a serious sport. The International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) was formed in Berlin in 1926 and international laws were adopted. The first official World Championships were held in London the same year. Seven countries participated.By this time balls were made of celluloid and bats consisted of sheets of pimpled rubber glued to wooden blades. Developments over later decades included "sandwich" rubber (pimpled rubber attached to a layer of sponge), rubbers specially treated to impart extra spin or to absorb spin, and "speed" glues which were absorbed into the sponge to make the rubber springier and add speed to the ball.

The birth of the game in New Zealand closely followed developments overseas and there are reports of a representative match between neighbouring districts as early as 1902. Several New Zealand district associations were formed to administer Table Tennis as a serious sport during the 1930's and at a meeting in Wellington on 11 April 1934 it was successfully proposed "That an Association be formed to be called the New Zealand Table Tennis Association".

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"Ping Pong" club - Dunedin 1901

 

First table tennis championships in New Zealand

Christchurch

1902

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Top & right : Fred Perry & Frank Wilde of England play Errol Cheal & Hec Pyle (Wellington) 1933
England won 21-18, 21-14, 21-23, 23-21

Fred Perry was World Table Tennis Tennis Champion in 1928 & 1929 and was also a World Champion in Tennis

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Public Notice in the Otago Witness August 26th 1903

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