What if you beat
Timo Boll (German legend, World Cup
Winner and simply the best non-Chinese player of the 21st century),
Jun Mizutani (8 time Japanese National Champion, Olympic Bronze Medalist),
Vladimir Samsonov (former WR1 and an evergreen tree), Fan Zhendong (the best
male player on the planet currently), Zhang Jike (Olympic and two time World
Champion) within a span of a year? What if you won the Japanese National
Championship, reached the quarterfinals of a World Table Tennis Championship,
won your first World Tour title, managed a top-four finish in a World Tour
Grand Finals? What if you bagged the most sought-after scalp in today’s men’s Table
Tennis - that of Ma Long (the most popular contender for GOAT) – in front of
your home crowd?
Then you would have
had a remarkable Table Tennis career indeed.
But imagine that you
did all this before celebrating your fifteenth birthday! That would simply be -
Ican’tfindasuitableadjectivevtodescribehowIfeelaboutthis.
Tomokazu Harimoto (Photo: Hideyuki Imai, www.ittf.com) |
Over the course of the
last year or so a fourteen year old Japanese teenager by the name Tomokazu
Harimoto has got hold of the Table Tennis fraternity by the scruff of their necks
and shaken them a couple of dozen times, poured ice cold water over them and “CHO-CHO”-ed
till their ears went numb!
The first time I heard
Harimoto’s name was when he beat Sharath Kamal in the semifinal of the 2017
India Open (one of the rare occasions when India hosted a World Tour Open). When
he lost to Dimitrij Ovtcharov of Germany (who had a fantastic 2017 too) in the
final, he missed out an opportunity to beat the previous record of the youngest
male winner of a World Tour (or Pro Tour as it was called earlier) event by
several years. Although he was quite
comprehensively beaten by Ovtcharov, the thirteen year old whose “cho”s drowned
out a heavily partisan crowd at the Thyagaraj Stadium during the semifinal made
a lasting impression.
Really young
sportspersons competing shoulder to shoulder with their adult counterparts and
managing to succeed is not unheard of. Nadia Komaneci is probably the most
famous name that comes to mind. Although average ages of female gymnasts do
tend to be on the lower side, in a sport like Table Tennis where players
continue to perform at incredible levels right in their early forties (Vladimir
Samsonov is currently 42, three times as old as Harimoto), it is extremely unusual to have a 14 year-old
challenging the top players.
Therefore I naturally assumed that Harimoto’s levels would soon drop and he
would be remembered as just another “wonderkid” who caused an upset or two. But
as the year unfolded and as Harimoto sent shockwave after shockwave through the
Table Tennis world, his detractors, who had dismissed him earlier, had to eat
their own words.
Although he had been
well-known as a “Japanese Wonderkid” for some time, he really announced himself
to the world at the 2017 World Championship in Dusseldorf. In the round of 64
Harimoto was drawn against his fellow countryman, Jun Mizutani. Mizutani has
been among the best non-Chinese male players for some years now and the 8-time
Japanese National Champion and the reigning Bronze-medalist from Rio 2016 was
widely expected to pose the strongest challenge to the Chinese vice-grip on the
World Championship. But Harimoto beat him and did it with astonishing ease.
Throughout the match, Mizutani was the one chasing the ball. Harimoto, playing
close to the table, from where his backhand was absolutely devastating,
consistently managed to control the rallies, by pushing Mizutani wide with the
help of his backhand and then exploiting the empty areas. Mizutani, who prefers
to play powerful counterloops away from the table, failed to adapt to this
super-aggressive, close-to-the-table play and eventually surrendered the match
11-07, 11-06, 14-12, 07-11, 11-08. Harimoto would eventually go on to lose 4-1
in the quarterfinal to China’s Xu Xin, but not before becoming the sport’s
youngest ever quarterfinalist at a world championship.
If Harimoto missed out
on a chance to become the youngest ever winner of a World Tour Open in Delhi,
he had to wait only six more months before he stunned everyone into silence by
winning the Croatian Open in August. It was an added bonus that his opponent in
the final was one of the most popular table tennis players, Timo Boll. From that moment on, he has just refused to
slow down. He made the semifinal of the China Open, lost a close seven-setter against
Xu Xin in Sweden and reached the semifinal of the World Tour Grand Finals,
where he narrowly lost to an in form Dimitrij Ovtcharov.
If Harimoto had been
successful on world stage there was one test he hadn’t yet passed. He hadn’t
yet beaten any of the top Chinese players.
The new-year began
with the World Team Cup in London, with fans excited with the prospects of a
potential China-Japan clash. When China and Japan did meet in the finals,
Harimoto was quite soundly out-muscled by an imperious Fan Zhendong.
Many had argued that
the “pros” would soon be better prepared to handle Harimoto and he would
quickly lose his edge. But with the top
Chinese players it was Harimoto who appeared better prepared with every passing
encounter. Against Xu Xin, after his 4-1 loss at the Worlds, he played a competitive
seven setter in Sweden. After his loss to Fan Zhendong in London, within no
time Harimoto rocked the Table Tennis world again by beating Fan Zhendong at
the Asian Cup in Yokohoma. But his crowning glory came late in May and early in
June when he followed his China Open win over Zhang Jike (arguably China’s
biggest superstar) by an unbelievable 4-2 win at the Japan Open over none other
than the best player of all time (my opinion), Ma Long. Ma Long losing a match
is a rarity and Ma Long losing a match to a non-Chinese player is just unheard
of (he did lose to Timo Boll of Germany and Jeong Sangeun of Korea in 2017). If all this wasn’t
enough he went on to win the tournament, beating Lee Sangsu of Korea (a Bronze
Medalist at the Worlds in Dusseldorf) and then Zhang Jike again in the final.
Although I have
highlighted his best moments, he did have several lows too. The ones that stand
out are his loss to the German defender Ruwen Filus at the Qatar Open, his
complete demolition by England’s Liam Pitchford at the World Team Cup and then
again at the World Team Championships and his defeat (after having beaten Fan
Zhendong) against Jeong Sangeun at the
Asian Cup. He does tend to be a little inconsistent. Having said that, thanks
to his incredible run, Harimoto managed to break into the world’s top 10 in May
2018.
Despite his Table
Tennis achievements, he his famous for (and very commonly abused online for)
his incredibly loud cheering. He cheers almost every point that he wins as if
it’s the championship point. This excessive shouting has earned him some
enemies among Table Tennis fans across the word. I, however, think Harimoto is
an extremely fair and courteous sportsperson. His cho-ing is never in the
opponent’s face. He never cheers after winning a lucky point and is prompt
in offering his opponent an apology after a fortuitous net- or edge-ball.
What is the reason
behind Harimoto’s unmatched ascent? What is the secret ingredient that makes
him so lethal? Based on my limited understanding of the game
and whatever I have gleaned from discussion forums on the internet, there appear to be several reasons. Firstly, the game has evolved remarkably fast over the last decade
or so. Newer playing styles have emerged. Strokes that were considered
blasphemous earlier are now the most common weapons. For example, playing a
backhand on the forehand side of the table was taboo until 13 years ago (that
was incidentally when I last played competitive Table Tennis). But in the
modern game, players routinely move to their forehand side and play a backhand,
especially while receiving serves. Although backhands are generally less
powerful than forehands, they have one big advantage: more wrist flexibility.
Therefore, using lightning quick movements of the wrist, modern players can produce
spinny, aggressive backhand strokes that require short backswings. Using these
backhand strokes one can attack balls that are short and therefore expected to
bounce twice on the table, something that is difficult to do with a forehand
stroke. In the midst of this, the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF), for some bizarre reason, decided to change
the material of the playing balls in 2013. The newer balls are a shade slower
and are less spinny. This has resulted in a more close-to-the-table,
super-aggressive style of play becoming popular among the men, who have
traditionally preferred counterlooping rallies away from the table. The women
on the other hand have always played lightning quick, close-to-the-table
rallies, involving shorter strokes. The bottomline is that the older players
have had to slightly alter their style of play to suit the modern game. But the
younger players have grown up playing this version of the game and therefore
are slightly better placed than their older colleagues. In fact, Harimoto is
not the only Japanese teenager, who has taken the world by storm. In the run up
to the Rio Olympics two Japanese 16-year olds (Miu Hirano and Mima Ito) beat two
of the most unbeaten Chinese women - Ding Ning (then already a two-time World Champion
and now also an Olympic Champion) and Liu Shiwen (WR1 for a long period of time). Although order was
restored at the Olympics and China swept all the Table Tennis medals, Hirano
and Ito have continued to spar with and sometimes emerge victorious against the
top Chinese women. Miu Hirnao, won the 2017 Asian Championships, beating Chen
Meng, Zhu Yuling and Ding Ning, a feat without a recent parallel. More
recently, at the World Team Championship Finals, Mima Ito beat Liu Shiwen in
the opening encounter, causing some nervous moments for the Chinese team, who
eventually managed to pull off a comfortable 3-1 win over Japan. At the 2018 Japan
Open, Ito matched Harimoto’s feat by pulling off a ridiculous come-back in the
semis against China’s Chen Xingtong from 3-0 down in games and 9-4 down in the
fourth, before beating Wang Manyu (the winner of three World Tour Opens this
year) in the final.
With Chinese dominance
under assault (and Harimoto at the vanguard), these are exciting times for
international Table Tennis. I think the Chinese will manage to defend their
fort as the strongest Table Tennis playing country on the planet, with an
endless conveyor belt of breathtaking players emerging out of that country.
However, a Japanese gold medal in the Singles event at the Tokyo Olympics looks a
definite possibility, especially given the rule at the Olympics that no
Association can send more than two players for the Singles event. Can Harimoto
create history (if he hasn’t done it already!) by becoming the youngest ever
Olympic Champion?
Only time will tell.
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