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
| Name | Prefecture | Head coach |
|---|---|---|
| T.T Saitama (T.T彩たま) | Saitama Prefecture | |
| Kinoshita Meister Tokyo (木下マイスター東京) | Tokyo | |
| Kanazawa Port (金沢ポート) | Kanazawa | |
| Shizuoka Jade (静岡ジェード) | Shizuoka | |
| Okayama Rivets (岡山リベッツ) | Okayama Prefecture | |
| Ryukyu Asteeda (琉球アスティーダ) | Okinawa Prefecture |
Women's teams
| Name | Prefecture | Head coach |
|---|---|---|
| Kinoshita Abyell Kanagawa (木下アビエル神奈川) | Kanagawa Prefecture | |
| Top Otome Pingpongs Nagoya (トップおとめピンポンズ名古屋) | Aichi Prefecture | |
| Nissay Red Elf (日本生命レッドエルフ) | Osaka Prefecture | |
| Nippon Paint Mallets (日本ペイントマレッツ) | Osaka Prefecture | |
| Kyushu Asteeda (九州アスティーダ) | Fukuoka Prefecture | |
| Kyoto Kaguyalyze (京都カグヤライズ) | Kyoto Prefecture |
Stadiums
- Takeda Teva Ocean Arena in Nagoya, Aichi
- Okayama Budokan in Okayama
- Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium in Namba, Osaka
- Wing Hat Kasukabe in Kasukabe, Saitama
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 1 | Doubles | Best of 3 | Score starts at 6–6 for the final game Play to 11 points only (i.e. 11–10 wins) for non-final games |
| Match 2 | Singles | Best 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
| Season | Winner | Runner-up | MVP | Best doubles pair |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018–19[3][4] | Tokyo (14W–7L) | Okayama (12W–9L) | Season & 2nd half: 1st half: | |
| 2019–20 | Tokyo (15W–6L) | Ryukyu (11W–10L) | Season & 1st half: 2nd half: | |
| 2020–21 | Ryukyu (15W–6L) | Tokyo (13W–8L) | Season: | |
| 2021–22 | Tokyo (15W–6L) | T.T Saitama (10W–11L) | Season & 1st half: 2nd half: | |
| 2022–23 | Ryukyu (12W–9L) | Tokyo (13W–8L) | ||
| 2023–24 | Tokyo (15W–5L) | Okayama (10W–10L) | Season: | |
| 2024–25 | TT Ayatama (16W–9L) | Ryukyu (16W–9L) |
Women's division
| Season | Winner | Runner-up | MVP | Best doubles pair |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018–19[3][4] | Nissay (18W–3L) | Kanagawa (13W–8L) | Season & 1st half: 2nd half: | |
| 2019–20 | Nissay (14W–7L) | Kanagawa (13W–8L) | Season & 2nd half: 1st half: | |
| 2020–21 | Nissay (13W–8L) | Kanagawa (17W–4L) | Season: | |
| 2021–22 | Nissay (16W–4L) | Nippon Paint (14W–6L) | Season & 1st half: 2nd half: | |
| 2022–23 | Kanagawa (15W–5L) | Nissay (11W–9L) | ||
| 2023–24 | Nissay (15W–5L) | Kanagawa (16W–4L) | Season: | |
| 2024–25 | Kanagawa (19W–6L) | Nippon Paint (21W–4L) |