2019 ITTF Men's World Cup

The 2019 ITTF Men's World Cup was a table tennis competition held in Chengdu, China, from 29 November to 1 December 2019. It was the 40th edition of the ITTF-sanctioned event.[1]

2019 ITTF Men's World Cup
LocationChengdu, China
Date29 November – 1 December 2019
Competitors20
Medalists
gold medal 
silver medal 
bronze medal 
← 2018
2020 →

Qualification edit

In total, 20 players qualified for the World Cup:[2][3]

  • The reigning World Champion
  • 18 players from the five Continental Cups held during 2019
  • A wild card, selected by the ITTF

A maximum of two players from each association could qualify.

Means of qualification Date Venue Places Qualified players
2019 World Championships 23–28 April 2019   Budapest 1   Ma Long
2019 ITTF Pan-America Cup 1–3 February 2019   Guaynabo 2   Hugo Calderano
  Kanak Jha
2019 Europe Top 16 Cup 2–3 February 2019   Montreux 3   Dimitrij Ovtcharov
  Vladimir Samsonov
  Timo Boll
2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup 5–7 April 2019   Yokohama 3   Fan Zhendong
  Koki Niwa
  Tomokazu Harimoto
2019 ITTF-Oceania Cup 25–26 May 2019   Bora Bora 1   Hu Heming
2019 ITTF Africa Cup 3–5 August 2019   Lagos 1   Omar Assar
Additional qualifiers[nb 1] n/a n/a 8   Lin Yun-ju
  Daniel Habesohn
  Simon Gauzy
  Jonathan Groth
  Kristian Karlsson
  Sathiyan Gnanasekaran
  Lee Sang-su
  Wong Chun Ting[nb 2]
  Quadri Aruna
ITTF wild card n/a n/a 1   Mattias Falck
Total 20
Notes
  1. ^ Based on Continental Cup finishing position and ITTF World Ranking.
  2. ^ Wong Chun Ting withdrew due to injury and was replaced by Quadri Aruna.[4]

Competition format edit

The tournament consisted of two stages: a preliminary group stage and a knockout stage. The players seeded 9 to 20 were drawn into four groups, with three players in each group. The top two players from each group joined the top eight seeded players in the second stage of the competition, which consisted of a knockout draw.[5]

Seeding edit

The seeding list was based on the official ITTF world ranking for October 2019.[5]

  1.   Fan Zhendong (champion)
  2.   Ma Long (semifinals)
  3.   Tomokazu Harimoto (final)
  4.   Hugo Calderano (quarterfinals)
  5.   Timo Boll (quarterfinals)
  6.   Mattias Falck (first round)
  7.   Lin Yun-ju (semifinals)
  8.   Koki Niwa (quarterfinals)
  9.   Dimitrij Ovtcharov (quarterfinals)
  10.   Lee Sang-su (first round)
  11.   Quadri Aruna (first round)
  12.   Simon Gauzy (first round)
  13.   Vladimir Samsonov (preliminary round)
  14.   Jonathan Groth (preliminary round)
  15.   Kristian Karlsson (first round)
  16.   Kanak Jha (first round)
  17.   Sathiyan Gnanasekaran (first round)
  18.   Omar Assar (preliminary round)
  19.   Daniel Habesohn (first round)
  20.   Hu Heming (preliminary round)

Preliminary stage edit

The preliminary group stage took place on 29 November, with the top two players in each group progressing to the main draw.[6]

Main draw edit

The knockout stage took place from 29 November to 1 December.[7]

First round Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
1   Fan Zhendong 11 13 11 11
19   Daniel Habesohn 8 11 7 2 1   Fan Zhendong 11 11 11 7 12
17   Sathiyan Gnanasekaran 11 8 5 9 8 5   Timo Boll 6 9 5 11 10
5   Timo Boll 7 11 11 11 11 1   Fan Zhendong 11 11 11 11
7   Lin Yun-ju 11 11 11 4 11 7   Lin Yun-ju 8 6 8 5
15   Kristian Karlsson 8 4 7 11 9 7   Lin Yun-ju 5 11 11 11 11
16   Kanak Jha 11 11 6 11 7 5 8 4   Hugo Calderano 11 4 6 6 3
4   Hugo Calderano 9 9 11 9 11 11 11 1   Fan Zhendong 9 11 6 11 11 11
3   Tomokazu Harimoto 11 13 12 6 11 3   Tomokazu Harimoto 11 4 11 8 2 7
11   Quadri Aruna 7 11 10 11 6 3   Tomokazu Harimoto 11 11 10 10 12 11 11
10   Lee Sang-su 6 8 16 7 11 11 8   Koki Niwa 6 7 12 12 14 3 8
8   Koki Niwa 11 11 14 11 8 13 3   Tomokazu Harimoto 11 11 11 8 4 11 Third place
6   Mattias Falck 8 11 11 8 12 7 11 2   Ma Long 6 9 8 11 11 5
9   Dimitrij Ovtcharov 11 3 8 11 10 11 13 9   Dimitrij Ovtcharov 11 9 4 11 3 7   Lin Yun-ju 11 13 8 9 11 5 11
12   Simon Gauzy 7 8 11 5 11 13 2   Ma Long 6 11 11 13 11 2   Ma Long 4 11 11 11 8 11 4
2   Ma Long 11 11 9 11 8 15

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "New dates announced for 2019 ITTF Men's World Cup". ITTF. Retrieved 18 June 2019.
  2. ^ "Qualification System / Women's and Men's World Cup" (PDF). ITTF. Retrieved 18 June 2019.
  3. ^ "List of players: 2019 ITTF Men's World Cup" (PDF). ITTF. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  4. ^ "Quadri Aruna to replace injured Wong Chun Ting at Men's World Cup". ITTF. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  5. ^ a b "Qualification and Playing System / Men's and Women's World Cup" (PDF). ITTF. Retrieved 17 July 2018.
  6. ^ "2019 ITTF Men's World Cup / Results / Groups". ITTF. Retrieved 1 December 2019.
  7. ^ "2019 ITTF Men's World Cup / Results / Knockouts". ITTF. Retrieved 1 December 2019.

External links edit

Tournament page on ITTF website