spectatorship in China is loosing grounds, that is a certain.
a chinese coach told me, after arrival back from my French trip, so that is about 10 days ago,
I was talking about Pro A and how a match against the Lebruns, can the host club make a good 5 digit income from ticket sales.
The chinese super league, we see it is as full, but he said, the truth is, about 2/3 of the tickets were given away for free.
he said, if they didn't do that, they won't be able to fill the stadium.
We then talked about that it is fan chasing spectators now, and if it isn't your fan playing, there is no incentive to be there to watch others. and the Chinese coach said the European club model where it is "club fans", where it could be few generations supporting the club, is something really special.
I know in the older ITTF days, the local organizing committee would bus in soldiers or school kids (in uniform) to fill those ITTF stadiums, but those stadiums are way bigger than WTT one's today.
Since ages, and starting in its history mainly in the darkness of its Middle Age with the Inquisition blocking any progress, cities in the same country fighting against each others in support of the House of king/Queen they feel was more legit than the other. Europe has always been like that: brutal, violent, live or die was the motto.
It was litteraly Game Of Thrones, and it was THAT brutal, THAT violent.
Duels were created to avoid civil wars, but it mostly always resulted in civil wars though. The Last duel depicts a true story of the last judiciary duel.
It translated into sports for many reasons: England have invented many of todays sports and some of those were brutal, like rugby, and americans from british descent like Paul Naismith invented basketball, that can also be a brutal and violent sport that is mainly based on dominating your opponent by size and also by force.
There were many battles between cities of the same country in the Middle Ages, in France for example there were conflicts between the House of Valois, The House of Orléans ally of the House of Armagnac, and the House of Bourgogne that was an ally of the british House of Lancaster. Name it as it is: civil war, war of thrones.
It's been like that everywhere in Europe, and it's still remaining: the crunch between France and England in rugby because of the old 100 years War. Those countries are allies since only WWI, the US and France have been allies since way before that. The civil wars in Yugoslavia also.
If you add to history a league system with relegations and promotions, there's way more spice to it: live or die remains the motto. But when you are relegated to the inferior level league, you can still be promoted the year after if you win that championship, and then you can get your revenge, we know many examples of that, rivalries between football clubs in England for example, or between european clubs. That went a bit too far with the Liverpool's hooligans in the Heysel Stadium disaster in Brussels in 1985.
The tiniest area where you feel you belong to being your own town, village, city, sports in Europe became a challenge between villages, towns or cities: PSG/OM, Real Madrid/FC Barcelona clasico, or even only between neighborhood of the same city: Panathinaikos vs Olympiacos, both in Athens. And when you look back to the Greek Antiquity, it was like that: neighborhood and cities fighting against each others because of their allegiance to Houses.
That's why there are many different generations filled in the same arena or stadium supporting their club's team.
It's something that creates that feeling of belonging, a feeling that does not exists in leagues with no relegations/promotions or franchises created artificially in the NBA for example: Seattle Supersonics disappearing to become OKC, Oklahoma City Thunder: how can you feel that you belong to a team that got out of your city to be named differently in another one thousands of kilometers away ? impossible.
The Chinese games or CSL are like the NBA: franchise are created and players never belong to the same team the year after. You don't see that in Borussia Dusseldorf, with Timo for example that always played there. You don't see that in Bruille where the Coton bros. will always belong too, or Montpellier with the Lebruns. It's more than being french: it's a city you belong to, when foreign players go to the Montpellier WTT Champions, they don't face France only, they face the ANMTT "Alliance Nimes Montpellier", an alliance between 2 cities in the south of France. That's why it's that hot in the arena.