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You’re right, the talent is here, it just gets drafted into football and basketball before it ever reaches a ping pong table. What we need is one Lebron shaped athlete to break through, win on the biggest stage, and suddenly the whole country sees table tennis as a real path. That’s when the golden era starts.I hope this movie inspires at least a few young-uns to start up TT in USA. All of our talent is funneled to football, basketball, etc. We just need a prodigy athletic freak like Lebron James to win Olympic gold for us once to usher in a new golden era of American TT XD
And get TT into middle and high schools! School teams just like Asia!You’re right, the talent is here, it just gets drafted into football and basketball before it ever reaches a ping pong table. What we need is one Lebron shaped athlete to break through, win on the biggest stage, and suddenly the whole country sees table tennis as a real path. That’s when the golden era starts.
In nyc we hav both a middle and high school leaguesAnd get TT into middle and high schools! School teams just like Asia!
Wow I did not know that! So jealous, nothing like this in the southIn nyc we hav both a middle and high school leagues
It took some enthusiastic volunteers to organize and NY is smaller and easier to commute over.Wow I did not know that! So jealous, nothing like this in the south
Beware of being too enthusiastic about a movie's message and impact before you have seen it. It might say something subtly or completely different from what you expect.
if you have a lot of rich folks,What we really need is to get TT into elementary schools, but how to is the difficulty. I wish the film luck though.
I have always thought the way to make table tennis more popular with the general public was through a hit movie. Past attempts like Forest Gump and Balls of Fury failed because they treated table tennis as a joke. A great movie needs either a great plot or great character development. Marty Reisman certainly was a character, so it has that going for it. But this movie shows table tennis as it was 60 or 70 years ago. People who see this and go to a local club to play with their cheap hard bat they use in their basement will be frustrated and quit. They will find out they need to spend $300 to buy a competitive racket. I thought a movie about ping pong diplomacy would be a good idea. Glenn Cowan's accidentally getting on the Chinese team bus at the world championships and results would be a good story. As an aside, in the 1980's I played some tournaments in Portland, Oregon when Dean Doyle was the US hardbat champion. He lived in the venue and I stayed overnight in some rooms they had downstairs with mattresses in them. After the tournament was over for the day we would go out for pizza, then come back and Dean would play challenge matches for money. He was highly rated in sponge also. He used his hardbat while his opponents used their sponge bats and he still won.
I kinda agree with a lot of you - it’s fun and might get more folks talking about ping pong, but I doubt it’s gonna revive American TT by itself. Sure, more people might sign up at clubs or schools because of the movie hype, and ping-pong merch and tables are popping up everywhere, but real growth comes from infrastructure and programs, not just one character film.The mix of ego, money, and love for the game reminds me of a wild night in a casino, with chips flying like it’s blackjack or roulette and someone chasing that jackpot. If Marty knows how to handle serious betting pressure, he might turn the sport into a profitable show, not just a hobby for die hard fans. In the middle of all this talk about risk and reward I kept thinking about how smart players study odds, bonuses, and bankroll strategy on sites like https://magyarkaszinooldalak.com/legjobb-kaszinok/uj-kaszino/ because having info can change your game and mindset. Whether it’s slots or table tennis, the thrill of the bet and the chance to win cash is what keeps people hooked.