It's table tennis, NOT ping-pong (2024)

The 2024 Paris Olympic Games will welcome back the fastest sport played on a tabletop: table tennis.

Have you called it ping pong before? Excusez-Moi but that is an Olympic faux pas. The sport is formally recognized internationally and Olympically as table tennis.

Confused? NBC Olympics breaks down the history of table tennis, and why you might have called it ping-pong.

The history of table tennis

The advent of table tennis dates back to the late 1800s when the wealthy Victorians in England created an indoor version of lawn tennis using items around the house to assemble a makeshift tennis court. Rubber and cork balls were the common materials used in the first iteration of the table tennis ball.

As table tennis grew in popularity, sports equipment manufacturers and businesses filed patents related to the burgeoning game. In 1883, sports equipment company Slazenger, now known as the official ball sponsor of Wimbledon, filed a patent for a net in which table tennis was mentioned.

In 1901, the Table Tennis Association was formed in England, and just four days later, the Ping Pong Association was founded. Two years later, the two merged in a joint effort to promote the sport.

The sport of table tennis was ratified in 1926 after a series of meetings held in London and Berlin, which ultimately led to the formation of the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF).

While the first World Championships were held the same year as the formation of the ITTF, table tennis did not debut at the Olympics until 1988 at the Seoul Games.

It's table tennis, NOT ping-pong (1)

Table tennis on board a Red Star Line passenger ship, 1907. The Red Star Line ran between Antwerp in Belgium, Dover in England and New York in the USA. Postcard.

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So, where did ping-pong come from?

Celluloid balls were introduced into the budding table tennis game in 1900. They produced the perfect bounce and became a staple of the table tennis equipment set.

Not only did the celluloid ball produce the perfect pop, but players and spectators alike became fascinated by the significant sound that emanated with each bounce off the paddle. People began to call the sport by that same distinct sound, and variants of the game's name started to sprout up, including whiff-whaff, pom-pom, clip-clap and ping-pong.

As the game became ubiquitous, two names prevailed: table tennis and ping-pong. To capitalize on the game, a company named J. Jaques & Son Ltd. trademarked "ping-pong" in 1901 and manufactured table tennis sets under the same name. In the 1920s, the game crossed the Atlantic Ocean. The Parker Brothers, creators of the board game Monopoly, acquired the rights to ping-pong and started distributing ping-pong sets in the states.

It's table tennis, NOT ping-pong (2)

Boy holding two Parker Brothers Ping Pong equipment sets, standing in front of oak trees at South Park for Pittsburgh Courier newsboys picnic, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania in 1960.

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With the prevalence of ping-pong game on the shelves of local stores, ping-pong became a widely accepted and understood name for the game of table tennis. The term ping-pong has gone through what is referred to as a "genericide", when a brand name loses it's distinguishing identity and just refers to the product or service of its kind. It's akin to how people refer to tissues as "Kleenex," the brand name of a tissue.

Today, ping-pong refers to the recreational, leisure activity of the sport of table tennis. Table tennis is still the internationally recognized formal name of the sport.

Ping-pong's political and pop culture legacy

At the 1971 World Table Tennis Championships held in Nagoya, Japan, the Chinese team was under strict government orders not to interact with the Americans, as relations between the two countries had been tense since the start of the Cold War.

During the tournament, 19-year-old American table tennis player Glenn Cowan boarded the Chinese team's shuttle bus. Zhuang Zedong, the best Chinese table tennis team player, outstretched his hand to Cowan to shake, and the two started to communicate through an interpreter. By the end of the conversation, Zedong gave Cowan a picture of the Huangshan mountains in China. The next day, Cowan reciprocated Zedong's gesture and gifted him a t-shirt with the peace sign. Photographers captured the exchange, and the goodwill between the countries became international headlines. Before the tournament concluded, the U.S. table tennis team was met with a surprising offer – an all-expense paid trip to China, courtesy of the Chinese government and Chairman Mao.

After getting clearance from the government and President Nixon, nine U.S. table tennis players traveled to China to play exhibition table tennis matches. These "friendship matches," as they were called, marked the first time Americans visited China in decades and historically helped improve country and cultural relations. President Nixon documented the momentous sporting occassion in his memoir, and thus, the term "ping-pong diplomacy" was born.

I had never expected that the China initiative would come to fruition in the form of a ping-pong team.

It's table tennis, NOT ping-pong (3)

Players of China and the United States take part in a table tennis friendly match in Beijing, China, April 13, 1971.

Getty Images


The visit to China has been recorded in countless publications and reenacted in the 1994 film Forrest Gump. The fictional character Forrest Gump found himself on disabled leave from the Vietnam War and picked up what he called ping-pong.

"I was so good that some years later, the Army decided I should be on the All-America ping-pong team," said Forrest Gump in the film.

The name ping-pong inspired the virtual world, when video game manufacturer Atari developed the game Pong. The game was the digital version of table tennis, and the name derives from ping-pong. Pong was the first commercially successful video game and changed gaming forever.

Beside the silver screen and the digital game front, ping-pong is still regularly referenced to this day, on TV, at your local recreation center, and even in song – thanks to musical artist Enrique Iglesias, who sampled the sound of a table tennis ball bounce in a song. The song is aptly titled, "Do You Know? (The Ping Pong Song)". It's a surprise that Iglesias used the sound of a table tennis ball, not a tennis ball, as Iglesias's partner is former Olympic tennis participant Anna Kournikova.

So, this summer, as the top table tennis players take to the court, make sure to remember that it's table tennis, NOT ping-pong.

Unless of course, you're Forrest Gump.

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It's table tennis, NOT ping-pong (2024)

FAQs

Which is correct, ping pong or table tennis? ›

The correct title for the sport in the UK and most of the rest of the world is "table tennis". This is because "ping pong" is a trade mark, number 233177, registered by the London toy importers and manufacturers Hamley Brothers on 20 September 1900 for their version of table tennis manufactured by John Jaques & Son.

What is the response to ping is pong? ›

As someone in the tech industry, I can safely say pong is the most widely accepted term for a ping response.

Why is it called table tennis and not ping pong? ›

A similar situation arose in the United States, where Jaques sold the rights to the "ping-pong" name to Parker Brothers. Parker Brothers then enforced its trademark for the term in the 1920s, making the various associations change their names to "table tennis" instead of the more common, but trademarked, term.

Who calls ping pong table tennis? ›

However, it is mostly recreational players and amateurs who use the term “ping pong” to describe the game – while professionals stick to “table tennis” when calling and viewing the sport (as a professional one). China seems to be an exception, though, as the phrase “ping pong” is still popular for the sport.

Why do Americans call table tennis ping-pong? ›

Though it is excluded from official terminology, this name is very popular today. It notably originates from the onomatopoeic sound of the ball that appeared in the Far East in 1884: 'ping' is imitative of the sound of a bat striking a ball and 'pong' equates to the sound of the bounce on the table.

Is it okay to call table tennis ping-pong? ›

In modern times, it seems that our sport has split into two camps—the recreational players who tend to use the phrase ping-pong and table tennis interchangeably and treat it as a game or past-time, and the serious players who call it table tennis almost exclusively and view it as a sport.

Can you say ping-pong anymore? ›

Table tennis is also known as ping-pong. It's a trademarked name, but it's widely used as a generic term for the sport.

Why do we say ping-pong instead of ping-pong? ›

Ablaut reduplication dictates that, in any duplicating word combination, we always put the i sound (as in 'pit '), or the e (as in 'see'), first , before an a or o. Even with three elements, the 'rule' stands.

Is it table tennis or ping pong ball? ›

Table Tennis Balls (Ping pong balls) are spherical polymer balls fabricated specifically for the sport. Ping pong balls are colored as either white or orange depending on the table surface and game style.

Is the game of table tennis also called ping pong? ›

Table tennis, also known as ping-pong and whiff-whaff, is a sport in which two or four players hit a lightweight ball, also known as the ping-pong ball, back and forth across a table using small rackets. The game takes place on a hard table divided by a net.

Which came first ping pong or table tennis? ›

The game was invented in England in the early days of the 20th century and was originally called Ping-Pong, a trade name. The name table tennis was adopted in 1921–22 when the old Ping-Pong Association formed in 1902 was revived.

Do Chinese people call table tennis ping pong? ›

Table tennis, also known as ping pong, has been considered as the national sport of the People's Republic of China.

What is the old name for ping pong? ›

The origins of ping pong can be traced back to the late 1800s in England, where it was first played as a leisure activity for the upper classes. The game was known as "whiff-whaff" and was played with simple equipment, including a lightweight celluloid ball and crude paddles made from cork and parchment.

What is the rule for 7 0 in table tennis? ›

An informal rule in table tennis that says that a player wins a game at a score of 7-0 or 11-1. The offensive trump card is the smash. A player will typically execute a smash when the opponent has returned a ball that bounces too high or too close to the net.

Is ping-pong the correct term? ›

Table tennis is also known as ping-pong. It's a trademarked name, but it's widely used as a generic term for the sport.

Is the game of table tennis also called ping-pong? ›

Table tennis, also known as ping-pong and whiff-whaff, is a sport in which two or four players hit a lightweight ball, also known as the ping-pong ball, back and forth across a table using small rackets. The game takes place on a hard table divided by a net.

What is the proper name of table tennis? ›

The game was invented in England in the early days of the 20th century and was originally called Ping-Pong, a trade name. The name table tennis was adopted in 1921–22 when the old Ping-Pong Association formed in 1902 was revived.

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