A table tennis craze is set to sweep the British capital this summer with 100 ping pong tables popping up around the city, as the sport sheds its geeky image to become the latest urban trend.
The four-week Ping! festival, which was launched on Thursday, hopes to tap into the game’s growing popularity in a bid to get more British people to play sports by the time the Olympic Games take place in London in 2012.
The initiative, supported by the English Table Tennis Association (ETTA), will see 100 tables crop up in parks, museums and shops across the capital, and even Heathrow Airport is getting in on the action.
Table tennis is the world’s second most popular sport after soccer, with over 300 million registered players.
Although it was invented by the British, it is much more widely played in Asian countries. The Chinese consider it their national sport.
NERDY
But ping pong is undergoing a radical image change in Britain, and where it was once seen as a nerdy activity, it is now being embraced by hip city dwellers.
“It’s becoming a lot more trendy,” Diccon Gray, the ETTA’s facilities and delivery manager, said. “It’s being played in a number of bars now and we want to ride on the crest of the wave here.”
Also jumping on the bandwagon is the pop-up Ping Pong Parlour, a temporary table tennis cafe in central London’s fashionable Carnaby Street area.
“It’s a very sociable game and slightly quirky,” said Meera Sodha, manager of the Ping Pong Parlour.
Part of the appeal is that it is “easy to set up and easy to learn,” Gray says. “You can have lots of fun in a short space of time and that appeals to busy city people.”
Which might explain why Charlie Evans, 32, dropped by after work.
“I saw it advertised on the Internet and thought I’d give it a try,” he says, still wearing a tie as he waits for his turn at the table, racket at the ready.
GEEK-CHIC
He adds that he still thinks ping pong is “a bit geeky,” but says that’s part of the fun. “It’s a geek-chic thing, isn’t it?”
Invented in Victorian-era England, the game then known as “whiff whaff” is thought to have started out as after-dinner entertainment, with players using books as rackets and champagne corks for balls.
It became an Olympic sport in 1988, and Chinese players have dominated the medal tables ever since.
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