I read through the thread. A few comments and observations.
I really enjoyed the tournament. I never realized how exhausting it is to watch live table tennis matches. Over the course of three days, I spent 12 hours just watching live matches. The first night, I went to the main stadium. But the next two days, I chose to go to the tent. I like the intimate atmosphere of the tent as opposed to the main stadium.
I got all my autographs in the tent. Interestingly I got autographs from Lim Jong-hoon and Zhu Yuling. Lim went on to win the the men's double and Zhu went on to win woman's single. Moral of the story: give your fans autograph and you will win the tournament.
When Zhu signed the autograph, she had just beaten Shao Jieni. I could see sweats coming down her forehead while she signed autographs and took care of the fans. Great run!
Inside the tent, it seems very obvious what the tournament director was doing. One side of the table is right next to the curtain where the training hall is on the other side of the curtain. One side of the table is obviously right next to the fans. The tournament director consistently placed the popular players from, say, China and Japan on the side next to the curtain, away from the fans so they could exit the venue without being bothered by the fans. Less popular players, mainly players from Europe, got put on the side of the table where the fans sit next to. The only time the Japanese players were seated next to the fans were the women's double match of Ito/Hayata v.s Wang/Kuai. In that case, obviously they put the Chinese pair closer to the curtain so they were not bothered by the fans.
I don't know if I like this set up. The fans were overall respectful. They didn't bother the players until the matches had finished. None stepped over the barrier. And once the matches were over, some might shout their favorite players' names to see if they would come over. Most players just do a polite wave with their hands (i.e. Ito did that) and left quietly, while only a couple players came over to sign autographs. I think if you want to engage the fans, the tournament director should do the opposite: put the more popular players closer to the fans or at least assign the sides randomly. The way they did it was way too obvious and not fan-friendly.
On the side of the fans, for tables 2-4, there is a special section of 4-5 seats warded off with a simple barrier. I saw Anton Källberg seating there during the doubles match of Kallberg/Bergstrom against Varady/Metelova. I also saw Wang Liquin during the Ito/Hayata v.s Wang/Kuai match. Wang Liquin was sitting a couple sections away so I had to do a double take to make sure it is Wang Liquin himself! He still looked as fit as he was when playing!
During Xiang Peng's match v.s Sathiyan Gnanasekaran, Zhou Qihao, Xue Fei and a third tall Chinese player I did not recognize were sitting in that section as well. Some Chinese fans recognized them and tried to get some autographs. About 1-2 minutes in, the venue security came over to hush the fans away, saying, "they don't want to be bothered." As far as I could tell, these three players were actually enjoying the interaction but the fans dispersed per instruction.
The venue is held at the Orleans which is a local casino. Food options are fairly limited. About players walking very far to get their food, yeah, that's what casinos try to do. They put the hotel rooms as far away as possible so you have to walk through the casino to get to the venue and the restaurants. That is how casino makes their money.
Prices of everything in Vegas has gone up. The days of casinos giving you free drinks and cheap food to lure you in so you spend money on the tables or the slot machines are over. Now Vegas casino's want to make money on everything: food (much more expensive than before), lodging (the $50-$60 resort fee each day) and gambling (the arrival of triple zero roulette).
Finally, at the casino, I was able to do sport betting on table tennis matches! This is probably the first and only time in my life that I would get a chance to gamble on table tennis matches. As usual, all the matches involving the Chinese players were so lopsided. If you bet $10 on WCQ for example, if WCQ wins, then you get paid $0.30. So I ended up betting on matches involving non-chinese players. I ended up making $18.80 after betting $20 each on five matches. I am glad I did not lose my shirt in the casino and came home with my wallet relatively intact.
