1991 World Table Tennis Championships

The 1991 World Table Tennis Championships were held in Chiba from April 24 to May 6, 1991.[1][2]

North Korea and South Korea fielded a unified team under the name Korea (コリア[3][4] Koria), the first of all Unified Korean sporting teams. The women's Korean team captured the gold medal by topping China, winners of eight consecutive titles since 1975, 3–2 in the final.

Results edit

Team edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Swaythling Cup
Men's Team
  Sweden
Mikael Appelgren
Peter Karlsson
Erik Lindh
Jörgen Persson
Jan-Ove Waldner
  Yugoslavia
Zoran Kalinić
Ilija Lupulesku
Zoran Primorac
Robert Smrekar
  Czechoslovakia
Milan Grman
Tomáš Janči
Petr Javurek
Petr Korbel
Roland Vimi
Corbillon Cup
Women's Team
  Korea
Hong Cha-ok
Hyun Jung-hwa
Li Bun-hui
Yu Sun-bok
  China
Chen Zihe
Deng Yaping
Gao Jun
Qiao Hong
  France
Emmanuelle Coubat
Sandrine Derrien
Xiaoming Wang-Dréchou
Agnès Le Lannic

Individual edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's singles   Jörgen Persson   Jan-Ove Waldner   Kim Taek-Soo
  Ma Wenge
Women's singles   Deng Yaping   Li Bun-Hui   Chan Tan Lui
  Qiao Hong
Men's doubles   Peter Karlsson
  Thomas von Scheele
  Lü Lin
  Wang Tao
  Erik Lindh
  Jörgen Persson
  Andrei Mazunov
  Dmitry Mazunov
Women's doubles   Chen Zihe
  Gao Jun
  Deng Yaping
  Qiao Hong
  Ding Yaping
  Li Jun
  Hu Xiaoxin
  Liu Wei
Mixed doubles   Wang Tao
  Liu Wei
  Xie Chaojie
  Chen Zihe
  Kim Song-hui
  Li Bun-Hui
  Kalinikos Kreanga
  Otilia Bădescu

Unified team of Korea edit

Prior to the competition, North and South Korea discussed the possibility of the first unified football and table tennis teams since Korea's division. In February 1991, they agreed to the creation of the unified table tennis team to compete at the 1991 World Table Tennis Championships.[5] According to Chang Ung, International Olympic Committee member from North Korea, the decision took 22 rounds of talks between the Koreas and five months.[6]

The team used "Korea" (Korean hangul: 코리아, McCune–Reischauer: K'oria, Revised Romanization: Koria, Japanese: コリア Koria) as the country name avoiding Hanguk (한국) or Chosŏn (조선). It also used the Korean Unification Flag as the national flag and Arirang as the national anthem.[7] Upon defeating the supposedly "unbeatable" Chinese team, the women's team caused a big sensation in Korea.

A South Korean movie Korea (코리아) ("As one") was released on May 3, 2012, and describes the story of the women's team. Hyun Jung-Hwa was portrayed by Ha Ji-won and Li Bun-Hui by Bae Doona.[5][8]

References edit

  1. ^ "World Championships Results". ITTF Museum. Archived from the original on 2017-04-24. Retrieved 13 April 2017.
  2. ^ "ITTF Statistics". ittf.com. Retrieved 13 April 2017.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "1991年千葉世界卓球選手権大会 南北統一チーム『コリア』女子団体優勝". YouTube.
  4. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Table Tennis World Cup 1991 ダイジェスト". YouTube.
  5. ^ a b 사상 최초 남북 단일팀의 통일의 기적 <코리아>, the official blog of the Ministry of Unification, South Korea
  6. ^ "N Korea refuses South's Olympic offer". BBC News. 26 June 2017. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
  7. ^ 탁구 남북 단일팀 우승 20주년..감동 다시 한번! 2011-12-11, Yonhap News TV
  8. ^ 코리아 - Daum 영화 Archived 2016-03-05 at the Wayback Machine (from Daum's movie portal)

External links edit