World Championships 1989, Dortmund
FINAL MEN'S TEAM, Sweden-China 5-0:
1) Mikael Appelgren 阿佩伊伦 - Jiang Jialiang 江嘉良 21-10, 18-21, 21-15 (2:1) 1-0
2) Jan-Ove Waldner 瓦尔德内尔 - Teng Yi 滕义 20-22, 21-19, 21-17 (1:2) 2-0
3) Jorgen Persson 佩尔森 - Chen Longcan 陈龙灿 20-22, 21-19, 21-13 (2:1) 3-0
4) Jan-Ove Waldner - Jiang Jialiang 21-16, 17-21, 21-16 (2:1) 4-0
5) Mikael Appelgren - Chen Longcan 21-17, 21-16 (2:0) 5-0
In the 1989 World Team final you played the Chinese team with Chen Longcan, Teng Yi and Jiang Jialiang. Did all the Swedes speedglue at that time?
Jan-Ove Waldner: Yes, we all did.
Did the Chinese as well?
Jan-Ove Waldner:
Teng Yi did. Of that I am almost certain. I am less sure about the other two, but I think they did. After all, both Chen Longcan and Jiang Jialiang were traditional penholders.
Overall matches:
Waldner vs Teng Yi 23-7
Fast Attack - Looping:
This style is the most popular in modern table tennis. The first time we saw this was in the early 1970s, performed by Swede Stellan Bengtsson and Czech Milan Orlowski, and then Jan-Ove Waldner, Erik Lindh, and Jorgen Persson of Sweden in the 1980s.
tackar för uppladningen den här poängen även om han missar så ser man att han e den enda spelaren som tar det väldigt lungt och är jävligt snabb tummen upp:)
8jonte 1 year ago
To my informed view, Hungarians and Yugoslavians were the dominant loopers in the 70s-everybody knows that. Stellan had baby top stops-Anton even used side spin and reached many finals in the 70s-Hungarians included a back hand loop as well
bdsamlal 2 years ago
@sackwhacker why
OmniaBonaBonis 2 years ago
maybe you should show Waldner winning points!!
-not losing points
sackwhacker 2 years ago
OWNED ;-)
Treamo 3 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
hello
patpingpong 4 years ago