1934 World Table Tennis Championships – Women's Team

The 1934 World Table Tennis Championships – Corbillon Cup (Women's Team) was the first edition of the women's team championship.[1] [2]

1934 Corbillon Cup (Women's Team)

The cup was named the Corbillon Cup because it was named after Marcel Corbillon (the President of the French Table Tennis Association (FFTT) from 1933 to 1935) who donated the trophy for the winning team. Germany won the gold medal with a 5-0 record in the round robin group. Hungary won the silver medal and Czechoslovakia won the bronze medal.[3]

Corbillon Cup Results

Team one Team two Score
GermanyEngland3-1
GermanyFrance3-1
GermanyNetherlands3-0
GermanyHungary3-2
GermanyCzechoslovakia3-2
EnglandFrance3-1
EnglandNetherlands3-0
EnglandHungary0-3
EnglandCzechoslovakia1-3
FranceNetherlands3-0
FranceHungary0-3
FranceCzechoslovakia1-3
NetherlandsHungary0-3
NetherlandsCzechoslovakia0-3
HungaryCzechoslovakia3-2

Final Table

Pos Team P W L Squad
1 Germany550Anita Felguth, Annemarie Haensch, Astrid Krebsbach, Mona Muller
2 Hungary541Magda Gál, Mária Mednyánszky, Anna Sipos
3 Czechoslovakia532Marie Kettnerová, Marie Šmídová, Jozka Veselska
4 England523Dora Emdin, Nora Norrish, Margaret Osborne, Wendy Woodhead
5 France514Yvonne Fayard, Marguerite De Tenaud, Monique Ravigneaux, Didi Tughendat
6 Netherlands505Loes Hiltrop, Aartje Kappelhoff, Marie-Helene Sohn
gollark: It runs headless though.
gollark: > also i bet hollark hasent used a PC with a Xeon in it recently, they are pretty decent for the price on eBay<@320337671744520192> I've got a server with one. In most tasks I believe it's beaten by any Ryzen except the 1st/2nd gen dual/quadcores.
gollark: Also the PSU is entirely over the top.
gollark: This is not a very good idea. They're suggesting an ancient CPU/board with low single threaded (and general really) performance.
gollark: Sunlight doesn't have some sort of magic unfathomable quality. If you get a similar spectrum at similar intensity it's basically the same.

See also

List of World Table Tennis Championships medalists

References

  1. "List of Winners". All About Tennis.
  2. Montague, Trevor (2004). A-Z of Sport, pages 699-700. The Bath Press. ISBN 0-316-72645-1.
  3. "Table Tennis World Championship medal winners". Sports123.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.