T.League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The T.League (Japanese: Tリーグ; Romaji: T.Rīgu) or Nojima T.League (Japanese: ノジマTリーグ) is the premier table tennis league of Japan which began in 2018. It is the first professional table tennis league in Japan.[1] There are twelve teams, six each for men and women.

Teams

Men's teams

More information Name, Prefecture ...
NamePrefectureHead coach
T.T Saitama (T.T彩たま)Saitama PrefectureJapan Yuya Mizuno (水野裕哉)
Kinoshita Meister Tokyo (木下マイスター東京)TokyoJapan Wang Kai (王凱)
Kanazawa Port (金沢ポート)KanazawaJapan Akira Saito (西東輝)
Shizuoka Jade (静岡ジェード)ShizuokaJapan Masataka Morizono (森薗政崇)
Okayama Rivets (岡山リベッツ)Okayama PrefectureJapan Kōsuke Shiraga (白神宏佑)
Ryukyu Asteeda (琉球アスティーダ)Okinawa PrefectureJapan Kazuhiro Chang (張一博)
Close

Women's teams

More information Name, Prefecture ...
NamePrefectureHead coach
Kinoshita Abyell Kanagawa (木下アビエル神奈川)Kanagawa PrefectureJapan Rui Nakazawa (中澤鋭)
Top Otome Pingpongs Nagoya (トップおとめピンポンズ名古屋)Aichi PrefectureJapan Misako Wakamiya (若宮三紗子)
Nissay Red Elf (日本生命レッドエルフ)Osaka PrefectureJapan Yasukazu Murakami (村上恭和)
Nippon Paint Mallets (日本ペイントマレッツ)Osaka PrefectureJapan Yumi Oshima (大嶋由美)
Kyushu Asteeda (九州アスティーダ)Fukuoka PrefectureJapan Hidefumi Masuda (増田秀文)
Kyoto Kaguyalyze (京都カグヤライズ)Kyoto PrefectureJapan Shuhei Kobayashi (小林修平)
Close

Stadiums

Format and rules

Each team match features one doubles match and at least three singles matches. If the score after four matches is 2–2, an extra-time, single-game "victory match" will determine the winner.[1] T.League rules differ from international table tennis rules.[2]

Match 1DoublesBest of 3Score starts at 6–6 for the final game
Play to 11 points only (i.e. 11–10 wins) for non-final games
Match 2SinglesBest of 5
Match 3
Match 4
"Victory match"1 game

Match 1 players may not play in Match 2. Matches 2, 3, and 4 must feature different players for both teams.[2]

Results

Men's division

More information Season, Winner ...
SeasonWinnerRunner-upMVPBest doubles pair
2018–19[3][4]Tokyo
(14W–7L)
Okayama
(12W–9L)
Season & 2nd half: Japan Jun Mizutani[5] (Tokyo)
1st half: Japan Tomokazu Harimoto[6] (Tokyo)
Japan Masataka Morizono
Japan Jin Ueda (Okayama)
2019–20Tokyo
(15W–6L)
Ryukyu
(11W–10L)
Season & 1st half: China Hou Yingchao[7] (Tokyo)
2nd half: Japan Takuya Jin[8] (Saitama)
Japan Kenta Tazoe
Japan Yukiya Uda (Tokyo)[9]
2020–21Ryukyu
(15W–6L)
Tokyo
(13W–8L)
Season: Japan Maharu Yoshimura (Ryukyu)Japan Kakeru Sone
Japan Hiroto Shinozuka (TT Ayatama)
2021–22Tokyo
(15W–6L)
T.T Saitama
(10W–11L)
Season & 1st half: Japan Mizuki Oikawa (Tokyo)
2nd half: Japan Kakeru Sone (TT Ayatama)
Japan Taimu Arinobu
Japan Yukiya Uda (Ryukyu)
2022–23Ryukyu
(12W–9L)
Tokyo
(13W–8L)
2023–24Tokyo
(15W–5L)
Okayama
(10W–10L)
Season: Taiwan Lin Yun-ju (Tokyo)Japan Masataka Morizono
Japan Tonin Ryuzaki (Shizuoka)
2024–25TT Ayatama
(16W–9L)
Ryukyu
(16W–9L)
Close

Women's division

More information Season, Winner ...
SeasonWinnerRunner-upMVPBest doubles pair
2018–19[3][4]Nissay
(18W–3L)
Kanagawa
(13W–8L)
Season & 1st half: Japan Hina Hayata[6] (Nissay)
2nd half: Japan Kasumi Ishikawa[5] (Kanagawa)
China Chang Chenchen
China Jiang Hui (Nissay)
2019–20Nissay
(14W–7L)
Kanagawa
(13W–8L)
Season & 2nd half: Japan Sakura Mori (Nissay)[9]
1st half: Thailand Suthasini Sawettabut[7] (Nippon Paint)
South Korea Yang Ha-eun
Japan Rika Suzuki (Nagoya)
2020–21Nissay
(13W–8L)
Kanagawa
(17W–4L)
Season: Japan Hina Hayata (Nissay)Japan Miyu Nagasaki
Japan Yui Hamamoto (Kanagawa)
2021–22Nissay
(16W–4L)
Nippon Paint
(14W–6L)
Season & 1st half: Japan Honoka Hashimoto (Kyushu)
2nd half: Japan Sakura Mori (Nissay)
Japan Hitomi Sato
Japan Honoka Hashimoto (Kyushu)
2022–23Kanagawa
(15W–5L)
Nissay
(11W–9L)
2023–24Nissay
(15W–5L)
Kanagawa
(16W–4L)
Season: Japan Miwa Harimoto (Kanagawa)Japan Kasumi Kimura
Japan Yurika Namba (Nagoya)
2024–25Kanagawa
(19W–6L)
Nippon Paint
(21W–4L)
Close

References

Official site

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI