The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Brazil’s Calderano can help popularize sport

- By Stephen Wade |

KAWASAKI, JAPAN — Yao Ming graced marquees for a decade in the NBA, spurring basketball’s growing popularity in China. Table tennis needs the inverse: an eye-catching outsider to get the focus off China. Hugo Calderano fits the profile.

He’s from Brazil (where table tennis is largely invisible), has beaten many of China’s top players, and speaks seven languages including Chinese. He is a player to broaden the game’s appeal.

“It’s still probably one of the biggest issues we have out there we have to tackle,” said Steve Dainton, the CEO of the ITTF, the sport’s world governing body. He described China’s domination of the game as a situation that has “lived with us for quite a while.”

“I kind of feel Hugo is a part of this change, and it’s been very positive — specifical­ly about China,” Dainton added.

Calderano is No. 5 in the sport’s ranking — he reached No. 3 a year ago — and he’s beaten many of the top Chinese, including No. 1 Fan Zhendong.

“If I’m hitting my shots, I have a great chance of winning, even against the best Chinese,” he told The Associated Press in an interview.

Calderano grew up Rio de Janeiro, his coach and support team are French, and he lives in Germany. He speaks Portuguese, English, French, Spanish, and German — and “can communicat­e” in Italian and, of course, Chinese.

“He has a very unusual profile,” Calderano’s coach Jean-rene Mounie said.

Chinese players have won 90% of table tennis’ Olympic gold medals, and it’s the country’s unofficial pastime. Men have won six of the last seven Olympic gold medals in singles, and the women have won every singles gold since the sport was introduced into the Summer Games in 1988.

China and table tennis have been synonymous since “Ping-pong Diplomacy” opened relations between the United States and China just over 50 years ago.

However, China didn’t invent it. That was 19th century England, where the parlor game was known as “whiff whaff ” and played across dining tables with wine corks fashioned into balls. Books or cigar boxes were the “net” and stiff place mats were possibly the first rackets or paddles.

Dainton wants China to sacrifice some of its medal dominance, focusing instead on internatio­nal developmen­t, sharing expertise, and financial profits.

“They are so technicall­y advanced and most of the world doesn’t have the knowledge,” he said. “Now it’s time for them to share the knowledge.”

An Australian who speaks Chinese, Dainton said he’s talked about Chinese supremacy in the sport with Liu Guoliang, the president of the Chinese Table Tennis Associatio­n and a two-time Olympic gold medalist.

“He (Liu) is very keen on developing internatio­nal stars because, even for China, it’s important the sport stays relevant and strong outside China,” Dainton said.

Mounie has coached Calderano for a decade and describes his game as playing “stronger, faster, and closer.”

“It’s my nature as a person and an athlete to be very aggressive all the time. I want to impose my game and dominate my opponent,” Calderano said.

Table tennis exists in two worlds. There’s the recreation­al, mass participat­ion game. And there’s the elite version followed across Asia and hotbeds in Europe; lightning strokes, fidgeting players, and a small table to magnify the speed.

Calderano varies the attack. One serve — a high-toss that goes 10 feet up — is followed by a very low one. He crouches almost below the table’s edge to begin the serve and, like many players, continuall­y rubs the table to remove imaginary debris. A sweaty hand gets dried in a corner by the net.

“Hugo is the strongest player in the world,” French player Simon Gauzy told the sports newspaper L’equipe. “He is hyper-aggressive all the time. When it works, it’s unstoppabl­e.”

Calderano’s dexterity goes beyond table tennis and languages. He has a personal record of solving the Rubik’s cube in 5.61 seconds — just 2 seconds off the world record.

His father and mother — Marcos Calderano and Elisa Borges, both teachers — got him started at a local club. He left Rio at 14 to train near Sao Paulo, moved at 16 to France and, after a few years back in Brazil to treat an injury, moved to Germany.

Calderano described China’s top four players as a cut above. “Then they have many other players who are just a level below who are also strong and very dangerous but don’t have the consistenc­y of the top guys,” he said.

Dainton, the CEO, said he expects the Chinese to again sweep gold in next year’s Olympics in Paris. But he can dream. Calderano reached the final 16 at Rio in 2016, and made the quarterfin­als at the Tokyo Olympics.

“We need those magical moments where there are some surprises,” he said. “Yes of course, if we had an American, a Canadian — I’ll say an Australian — that would be a massive, massive story.”

Or a Brazilian.

 ?? PHOTOS BY EUGENE HOSHIKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The ITTF, tennis table’s world governing body, sees broadening the sport’s appeal as one of its top issues. Steve Dainton, the CEO of the ITTF, believes Brazil’s Hugo Calderano (shown hitting the ball during a WTT tournament match Feb. 12 in Kawasaki, Japan) could be the answer to that issue.
PHOTOS BY EUGENE HOSHIKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS The ITTF, tennis table’s world governing body, sees broadening the sport’s appeal as one of its top issues. Steve Dainton, the CEO of the ITTF, believes Brazil’s Hugo Calderano (shown hitting the ball during a WTT tournament match Feb. 12 in Kawasaki, Japan) could be the answer to that issue.
 ?? ?? Hugo Calderano tosses the ball to serve as he competes Feb. 12 during a WTT tournament match in Kawasaki, Japan. Calderano, No. 5 in the sport’s ranking, has beaten many of the top Chinese players who dominate the game, including No. 1 Fan Zhendong.
Hugo Calderano tosses the ball to serve as he competes Feb. 12 during a WTT tournament match in Kawasaki, Japan. Calderano, No. 5 in the sport’s ranking, has beaten many of the top Chinese players who dominate the game, including No. 1 Fan Zhendong.

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