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Ping Pong Bats
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NEW Vigilante Titleholder™ MSRP: $119.99 Pro-Style Ping Pong Paddle Racket Bat US $29.95
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Pair Table Tennis Bat Wood Handle Racket w Orange Ball US $14.38
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Table-tennis Bats and Ball - 60"W x 40"H - Peel and Stick Wall Decal by Wallmonkeys Sale Price: $87.99 |
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WallMonkeys wall graphics are printed on the highest quality re-positionable, self-adhesive fabric paper. Each order is printed in-house and on-demand. WallMonkeys uses premium materials & state-of-the-art production technologies... |
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Sport 005 Ping Pong - 48"W x 32"H - Peel and Stick Wall Decal by Wallmonkeys Sale Price: $77.99 |
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WallMonkeys wall graphics are printed on the highest quality re-positionable, self-adhesive fabric paper. Each order is printed in-house and on-demand. WallMonkeys uses premium materials & state-of-the-art production technologies... |
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Table Tennis Bats, Ball and Net - 24"W x 16"H - Peel and Stick Wall Decal by Wallmonkeys Sale Price: $33.99 |
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WallMonkeys wall graphics are printed on the highest quality re-positionable, self-adhesive fabric paper. Each order is printed in-house and on-demand. WallMonkeys uses premium materials & state-of-the-art production technologies... |
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New Ping Pong Bats For Nintendo Wii Table Tennis Game |
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New Ping Pong Bats For Nintendo Wii Table Tennis Game. Product Specifications 100% brand new For Wii console Ping-Pong game Convenient to carry and use Good material intensity, comfortable hand feeling Player will feel playing in reality rather than simulation Transform your Wii remote into a Table Tennis Bat Compatible with Nintendo Wii What's Included in the Package 2 x Ping-Pong Bat *Accessory ONLY... |
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Brand New Ping Pong Bat for Wii List Price: $8.45 |
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Play all your favorite Wii Ping-Pong with this fun accessory. Convenient to carry and use with great materials for a comfortable hand feeling. With any Ping-Pong game it's easy to gain cheerfulness when you have the accessories to feel like you're more in reality than in a simulation. |
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Butterfly 401 Shakehand Table Tennis Racket List Price: $39.99 Sale Price: $31.95 |
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Improve your next game of ping pong with the Butterfly 401 Shakehand Table Tennis Racket. Designed with extremely tacky Butterfly Yuki rubber on both sides and a softer 2.1mm sponge layer, the Butterfly 401 Shakehand Table Tennis Racket will deliver tremendous spin, speed, and a springy feel on all your shots... |
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Butterfly 8181 Table Tennis Racket Care Kit List Price: $44.79 Sale Price: $14.99 |
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Take care of your table tennis racket with this Butterfly Racket Care Kit. The best racket in the world won't perform well if you don't keep the surface clean. The included Rushawa Foam Cleaner removes oil and dirt from your racket's rubber surface, yet is scentless and ozone friendly... |
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Butterfly Victory 4-Player Table Tennis Set List Price: $49.99 Sale Price: $43.75 |
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Designed for four players, this set features four table tennis rackets and eight balls. The inverted Addoy rubber surface on the rackets offers superb control and is ideal for close-to-the-table play. The high-quality balls have a three-star rating, which means they're suitable for official competition... |
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Mad About the Fifties: The Best of the Decade List Price: $19.95 Sale Price: $47.35 |
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Of all the recent collections assembled from the archives of MAD magazine, this volume might be the most interesting. It shows the beginnings of the magazine as a comic book, its transformation into a "slick" three years later in 1955, and its settling down into a familiar format under the stewardship of Al Feldstein... |
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Kung-Fu Table Tennis List Price: $13.50 Sale Price: $12.05 |
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Using his 46 years of knowledge and practical experience, Great Grandmaster Allen J. Chinn has successfully adapted Kung-Fu combat techniques and fighting philosophies to the sport of table tennis.Originally these techniques were used in table tennis play to keep up his Kung-Fu speed, and fine motor skills... |
Featured Article:

Table Tennis: More Than Just A Pasttime
Since its beginnings in the late nineteenth century, table tennis has acquired a huge number of enthusiastic followers, and the game itself has changed from a parlor game to a real sport.
The origins of table tennis, as of most other racket games, are obscure. Some claim that it originated in England; others say it was developed by English army officers stationed in India; and still others assert that it was first played in New England. Regardless of where it began, the game enjoyed the popularity of a fad in England, on the Continent, and in the United States during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, under various names such as "gossima" and "ping pong" - the latter name deriving from the sound made by the contact between ball and racket.
In its earliest form, table tennis was played with small racquets and battledores, and a light rubber ball, covered with a knitted web. In the late 1890's, the substitution of a celluloid ball for the rubber one then in use made the game still more popular. Because of the simplicity of the game and the lack of standardized rules and equipment, almost everyone was a good player.
In 1905, E. C. Goode of London introduced the rubber-faced racket, which made possible a variety of strokes and spins impossible with the primitive bat of the nineteenth century. This racket was substantially the same as the one used today. Despite the new possibilities which the invention of this racket provided for the development of a really scientific sport, the game lost its popularity shortly after Mr. Goode's innovation appeared on the market. Only in Hungary were players sufficiently interested in the game to continue playing.
About 1920 there was a revival of interest in table tennis in Europe, led primarily by the Hungarians who were to dominate international play until 1937. The International Table Tennis Federation was founded in 1926 in Berlin, modeled after an earlier organization formed in England, and the first set of official rules was adopted.
By this time the United States had once more become interested in the game, and the American Ping Pong Association was formed in 1930. The Association - and the tournaments which it sponsored - encouraged by the Parker Brothers of Salem, Massachusetts, who had patented the name "ping pong" some years before, and who were consequently the only manufacturers of "official" ping-pong equipment in America.
Other manufacturers of parlor games, aware of the profits to be made in producing equipment for this fast-growing sport, copied the Parker Brothers' product. Unable to market it under the patented name "ping pong," they called their table and rackets "table tennis" equipment, and sponsored the formation of the United Slates Table Tennis Association.
Each organization ran tournaments and established a national championship, and the rivalry, fed by the parlor-game manufacturers, encouraged interest in the sport still more. In 1934 the manufacturers finally banded together and the two associations were merged as the United States Table Tennis Association. The Association today is a non-commercial group with members in almost every state. It regulates the rules of the game, publishes a monthly magazine, sends the best American players to compete in amateur and World Championship tournaments in Europe, and generally promotes the growth of the game.
Table tennis has safely passed through the fad stage, and today has achieved a permanent place as one of America's most popular sports. Equipment is standardized and rules are specific. The scientific principles governing the behavior of a celluloid ball hit by a rubber-covered racket have now been explored and formulated to the extent that what was once a genteel parlor game which anyone could win is now a fast and thrilling sport, whose champions are among the swiftest and most agile of athletes.
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TABLE TENNIS RULES? (PING PONG)?
Me And My Bro Play Recreational, Purely Leisure, Table Tennis...Could U Brief Us On The Basic Rules.
For Example:
1) Can the Bat Hit The Table During Play?
2) If (A) Hits The Ball And It Hits The Top Of The Net And Drops To (B)'s Side, Is The Hit Counted As A Bounce? And If (B) Manages To Hit The Ball Back After Hitting The Net, Is It Counted?
3) If The First Serve Misses...Is There Such A Thing As A 'Fault' And A Chance At A Second Serve (Like In Tennis?) Or Is It A Point To The Opposition?
4) How Many Points Is One Game? (I Play First To 21)
5) Is It A Deuce If Both Players Hit 20?
10 Points If You Can Answer These Question Relevantly
1) YES: You cannot touch the table with your free hand.
2) Touching the net is not a bounce, and the net and net assembly (even AROUND the net assembly) are fair game - the ball just has to bounce on THE TOP of the table on your opponents side. So when player A hits the ball, it must strike the TOP of the table surface on player B's side, and then Player B must strike the ball back to the TOP of the table surface on player A's side.
3) No. Once the ball is tossed, a point is awarded - unless interrupted by an umpire or a Let is called.
4) 11 points per game. The serve is switched after every 2 points, except at Deuce.
5) Deuce is at 10.
100 ping pong tables put up for Londoners
Londoners and tourists will get the chance to play open-air table tennis at city landmarks this month in a campaign to get a million more people playing sports in the run up to the 2012 London Olympics.
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