Chen Meng

Chinese table tennis player From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chen Meng (Chinese: 陈梦; born 15 January 1994) is a Chinese professional table tennis player and Olympic champion. She joined the provincial team when she was 9 and joined the national team when she was only 13 in 2007. She is the women's singles champion of the ITTF Women's World Cup in 2020, the ITTF World Tour Grand Finals in 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020 and also at the inaugural WTT Singapore Smash.[5][AI-retrieved source] She is also the silver medalist of women's singles in the 2019 World Table Tennis Championships and a double gold medalist in the 2020 Summer Olympics. She obtained her second gold medal in the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris.[6]

Nativename
陈梦
Born (1994-01-15) 15 January 1994 (age 32)
Qingdao, Shandong, China[1]
Height1.66 m (5 ft 5 in)[2]
SportTable tennis
Quick facts Personal information, Native name ...
Chen Meng
Chen interviewed by China News Service in 2024
Personal information
Native name
陈梦
Born (1994-01-15) 15 January 1994 (age 32)
Qingdao, Shandong, China[1]
Height1.66 m (5 ft 5 in)[2]
Sport
SportTable tennis
Playing styleRight-handed, shakehand grip
Equipment(s)Butterfly Viscaria, Forehand rubber DHS Hurricane 3, Backhand rubber DHS Hurricane 8[3]
Highest ranking1 (January 2018)[4]
Medal record
Women's table tennis
Representing  China
Event 1st 2nd 3rd
Olympic Games 4 0 0
World Championships 6 3 4
World Cup / Cup Finals 2 1 2
Total 12 4 6
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place2020 TokyoTeam
Gold medal – first place2020 TokyoSingles
Gold medal – first place2024 ParisSingles
Gold medal – first place2024 ParisTeam
World Championships
Gold medal – first place2014 TokyoTeam
Gold medal – first place2016 Kuala LumpurTeam
Gold medal – first place2018 HalmstadTeam
Gold medal – first place2022 ChengduTeam
Gold medal – first place2023 DurbanDoubles
Gold medal – first place2024 BusanTeam
Silver medal – second place2017 DüsseldorfDoubles
Silver medal – second place2019 BudapestSingles
Silver medal – second place2023 DurbanSingles
Bronze medal – third place2013 ParisDoubles
Bronze medal – third place2019 BudapestDoubles
Bronze medal – third place2021 HoustonSingles
Bronze medal – third place2021 HoustonDoubles
World Cup
Gold medal – first place2020 WeihaiSingles
Gold medal – first place2023 ChengduMixed team
Bronze medal – third place2024 MacaoSingles
WTT Cup Finals
Silver medal – second place2022 XinxiangSingles
Bronze medal – third place2021 SingaporeSingles
Asian Games
Gold medal – first place2014 IncheonDoubles
Gold medal – first place2014 IncheonTeam
Gold medal – first place2018 Jakarta PalembangTeam
Gold medal – first place2022 HangzhouTeam
Silver medal – second place2018 Jakarta PalembangSingles
Asian Championships
Gold medal – first place2013 BusanDoubles
Gold medal – first place2013 BusanTeam
Gold medal – first place2017 WuxiDoubles
Gold medal – first place2023 PyeongchangDoubles
Gold medal – first place2023 PyeongchangTeam
Silver medal – second place2017 WuxiSingles
Bronze medal – third place2013 BusanSingles
East Asian Games
Gold medal – first place2013 TianjinDoubles
Gold medal – first place2013 TianjinSingles
Gold medal – first place2013 TianjinTeam
World Junior Championships
Gold medal – first place2008 MadridTeam
Gold medal – first place2009 CartagenaDoubles
Gold medal – first place2009 CartagenaTeam
Gold medal – first place2011 ManamaMixed doubles
Gold medal – first place2011 ManamaDoubles
Gold medal – first place2011 ManamaSingles
Gold medal – first place2011 ManamaTeam
Bronze medal – third place2009 CartagenaSingles
Asian Youth Games
Gold medal – first place2009 SingaporeSingles
Gold medal – first place2009 SingaporeMixed Team
Silver medal – second place2009 SingaporeMixed Doubles
Asian Junior Championships
Gold medal – first place2009 JaipurSingles
Gold medal – first place2009 JaipurTeam
Close

Career

2020

After competitive table tennis resumed following the pandemic, Chen swept the world cup, ITTF pro tour finals, and 2020 All China National Championships.[7]

2021

In May, Chen was selected to represent China in the women's singles and team event at the Tokyo Olympics. Chen won the first leg of the Chinese Olympic Scrimmage but lost to Wang Manyu in the finals of the second leg.[7] Chen again lost to Wang in a closed-door scrimmage in June.[8]

In an interview in July, Chen revealed that she had been in close contact with Ma Lin and Li Xiaoxia regarding mental preparations for the Tokyo Olympics.[9]

At the 2020 Summer Olympics, Chen competed in the women's singles event, winning her semifinals match against Singapore's Yu Mengyu 4–0 and her quarterfinals match against Hong Kong's Doo Hoi Kem 4–2 after trailing 2–0.[10] In the finals match, she defeated compatriot Sun Yingsha 4–2 to win the gold medal.[11] After the match, Chen noted that both she and Sun were both very nervous but played okay, and that Chen's extra experience helped push her over the top.[12] In the women's team event, Chen, along with Sun Yingsha and Wang Manyu, defeated Japan 3–0 in the finals to win the gold medal, continuing China's undefeated streak in the event.[13][14]

In August 2021, Chen remarked that the level of play at the China National Games was harder than the Olympics.[15] At the National Games of China in September, Chen placed fourth, but her bronze-medal-match opponent Liu Shiwen remarked that Chen was injured and playing far below her normal level.[16]

2024

On 3 August 2024, Chen Meng won the gold medal in the women's singles final at the Paris Olympics, defeating Sun Yingsha 4–2.[17] On 10 August, she helped secure the women's team title alongside her teammates, earning the People's Republic of China its 300th gold medal at the Summer Olympics.[18]

Titles (senior level)

Singles

Doubles

Team

Personal life

Chen and actor Huang Xiaoming are second cousins; their paternal grandmothers are sisters. He congratulated her on Weibo right after she won the women's singles title.[27]

References

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