by Ian Marshall, ITTF Publications Editor
Both have enjoyed celebrated moments during their careers; earlier this year Quadri Aruna won the African Cup in Agadir, more recently João Monteiro was pivotal to his country’s silver medal success at the recent Liebherr 2017 European Team Championships in Luxembourg.
Notable successes but as with Germany’s Benedikt Duda, the no.3 seed, an ITTF World Tour or ITTF Challenge Series Men’s Singles title remains elusive; the nearest is Quadri Aruna. He reached the final on home soil in Lagos in 2015 when beaten by Egypt’s Omar Assar.
In search of a first, for the Hong Kong pairing of Ho Kwan Kit and Jiang Tianyi, the next two names in the Czestochowa order of merit, the goal is to add to existing success. Ho Kwan Kit won in the Philippines in 2014; Jiang Tianyi emerged victorious in Brazil in 2008, later in 2015 in Hungary. In terms of ITTF World Tour or ITTF Challenge Series Men’s Singles titles, he is the most successful player on view in Poland.
England’s Liam Pitchford, Poland’s Wang Zengyi and Romania’s Ovidiu Ionescu complete the top eight names; like the top three, no member of the trio has won an ITTF World Tour or ITTF Challenge Series Men’s Singles event. The nearest is Wang Zengyi; in 2014 in Belarus he was beaten in the final by the host nation’s Vladimir Samsonov.
The top step of the podium elusive but there are those present in Czestochowa who have achieved such a feat.
On the ITTF World Tour, Romania’s Adrian Crisan, the no.13 seed, won in Brazil in 2005; Austria’s Daniel Habesohn emerged successful in 2014 in Hungary; last year the Czech Republic’s Tomas Konecny succeeded in Bulgaria, India’s Sathiyan Gnanasekaran prevailed in Belgium.
In Czestochowa, Tomas Konecny is the no.14 seed; Sathiyan Gnanasekaran is the no.24 seed, followed immediately by Daniel Habesohn.
Meanwhile, one further name can be added to the list; Soumyajit Ghosh, the no 20 seed, won earlier this year at the ITTF Challenge Series Chile Open in Santiago.