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Pingpong: A Chinese Obsession

STEVE INSKEEP, host:

If you asked Americans to rank the most important sports to them, table tennis might come in somewhere a little above foosball or bumper pool. But in China this is a national craze, and rabid fans treat top players like stars. NPR's Frank Langfitt reports.

(Soundbite of cheering)

FRANK LANGFITT: Six thousand fans have packed the gymnasium at Beijing University. They're chanting, "Go Ma Lin," cheering on one of China's top ping pong players. All eyes are focused on a field of play that is just five by nine feet. But the action on the table is intense. Ma Lin's smashing forehands push his opponent ten feet off the back of the table. And when Ma wins a point, he raises a fist to the crowd.

(Soundbite of cheering)

LANGFITT: This is the gold medal round for men's team competition, China versus Germany. Between matches, the announcer leads fans in a cheer.

Unidentified Man #1: (Speaking foreign language)

LANGFITT: When I say the name of the team, everyone say go, okay? Chinese team, go, German team, go. Even with the Chinese fans ordered to cheer for Germany as well, it's not enough.

(Soundbite of trumpet)

Unidentified Man #2: Please stand for the national anthem of People's Republic of China.

LANGFITT: Chu Ungshe(ph) has been watching the game from the second row, but as the stands empty, he won't leave. He leans over a barrier snapping photos of players as they file out through the tunnel. Chu and his wife, Hu Dung Lee(ph), have played ping pong since they were kids in the 1960s. She explains the game's attraction simply.

Ms. HU DUNG LEE (Ping Pong Player): (Through translator) It's our national sport.

LANGFITT: Finally, a security guard has to usher them out.

(Soundbite of commotion)

LANGFITT: I'm now on the other side of town and a world away from the Beijing University gymnasium. I'm standing out in front of the Rising Dragon's Table Tennis Club. It's one of about several dozen clubs here in the city that teach kids three to four hours a day how to play ping pong, and it's located in the basement of an apartment building here on the south side of town.

(Soundbite of ping pong game)

LANGFITT: The school is a warren of underground rooms filled with ping pong tables. Coach Lu Jung Yong(ph) scoops balls from a plastic wash basin and fires them at his pupils.

(Soundbite of ping pong game)

Mr. LU JUNG YONG (Coach): (Through translator) Don't keep your chest out. Don't keep your elbows in. Face forward. Correct.

LANGFITT: Coach Lu says ping pong is popular here because it fits Chinese physical characteristics; that includes people's relatively small stature.

Mr. YONG: (Through translator) From physical size to reaction time to dexterity, I think table tennis is a more suitable sport for Asians.

LANGFITT: The children here are as young as seven. After lunch and a nap, they gather around the TV to watch China in the men's singles competition. Again, China is represented by Ma Lin. Seven-year-old Shin Drew Yong(ph) likes what he sees.

Mr. SHIN DREW YONG (Student): (Chinese spoken)

LANGFITT: It's already two to zero, Shin says. He's really fierce. Shin started playing here a few hours a day when he was five.

Mr. YONG: (Chinese spoken)

LANGFITT: When I was younger, the table was this high, he says, putting his hand over his head. Shin says his mom, a beer factory worker, introduced him to ping pong.

Mr. YONG: (Chinese spoken)

LANGFITT: When there's a competition, my mom lets me watch, he says. And my mom told me, you have to smash the ball, and if you don't, then you'll give other people chances to win the point. Shin is just a hair over four feet.

What's your dream? I ask.

Mr. YONG: (Chinese spoken)

LANGFITT: My dream, he says, is to be world champion. After half an hour of watching ping pong, the TV goes off. Shin and the other kids return to the tables for two more hours of practice, following their dreams in China's national sport, one shot at a time.

Frank Langfitt, NPR News, Beijing. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Frank Langfitt is NPR's London correspondent. He covers the UK and Ireland, as well as stories elsewhere in Europe.