The Women’s World Cup forms part of the Grand Slam trio of titles, alongside the Olympic Games and World Championships. Whoever celebrates gold on Sunday 20th October will have to navigate their way past a highly competitive field of talent, stretching the entire globe.
That is because the all-star event features World champion Liu Shiwen (of China), her compatriot and Asian Cup champion Zhu Yuling, Europe Cup champion Petrissa Solja (Germany), Africa Cup champion Dina Meshref (Egypt), Pan American Cup champion Adriana Diaz (Puerto Rico) and Oceania Cup champion Jian Fang Lay (Australia), as well as a whole host of household names, who also qualified via their Continental Cups, plus wild card Lily Zhang of the United States, who comes highly rated after claiming four titles in September’s Pan American Championships in Paraguay.
Liu Shiwen wants record; Zhu Yuling eyes home pride
A Women’s World Cup winner in 2009, 2012, 2013 and 2015, Liu Shiwen would set an all-time record were she to win the title for her fifth time here in Chengdu. Liu currently sits level with former greats Wang Nan and Zhang Yining on four titles apiece.
For the reigning World champion, after her famous exploits in Budapest earlier this year, victory in the Women’s World Cup would also put Liu one step closer to claiming an incredible Golden Grand Slam, which she would only complete by clinching gold at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games (subject to selection).
Fellow Chinese star Zhu Yuling also has experience of winning the Women’s World Cup in 2017 in Markham, Canada. This time however, the tournament takes on an extra special meaning for the player, who is native to Sichuan Province:
– Zhu Yuling
As the top two seeds, Zhu and Liu will enter automatically into the knockout rounds (Saturday 19th and Sunday 20th October) along with 3rd to 8th seeds: Japanese duo Kasumi Ishikawa and Miu Hirano, Cheng I-Ching (Chinese Taipei), Doo Hoi Kem (Hong Kong China), Feng Tianwei (Singapore) and Europe’s top representative Sofia Polcanova (Austria).
Let the group stage begin!
Friday 18th October is dedicated to the group stage, where the players seeded 9th to 20th play off against one another in a bid to reach the weekend’s knockout rounds.
The top two players from each group will qualify for the main draw, where they will be pitted against the 1st to 8th seeds.
Let’s take a look at the groups in detail:
Group A
The highest ranked player involved in first-day action, Romania’s Bernadette Szocs has been drawn into a highly competitive group alongside Puerto Rican star Adriana Diaz and USA’s Lily Zhang. Szocs and Diaz – who is making her Women’s World Cup debut in Chengdu – have never crossed paths before, while the Romanian’s last encounter with Zhang came in an Under 21 contest back in 2015. This promises to be a tight race for the main draw.
Group B
Will Dina Meshref’s experience be the difference in Group B? The Egyptian is making her seventh appearance at the Women’s World Cup. In stark contrast, this is the first ever showing for three-time Paralympic gold medallist, Natalia Partyka of Poland. Completing the group is Korea Republic’s Jeon Jihee, who won women’s doubles gold at last week’s German Open. Can she convert that form into her singles game?
Group C
Another well-balanced group sees Germany’s Petrissa Solja joined by Chinese Taipei’s Chen Szu-Yu and Australia’s Jian Fang Lay. Solja and Chen head into the group as favourites to progress, but rule out Jian at your peril: the 46-year-old, carrying the hopes of Oceania on her shoulders, defied the odds to reach the round of 16 last year in Chengdu. Can she upset the odds yet again?
Group D
The fourth and final group sees Romania’s Elizabeta Samara welcome opposition from two North American stars in Canada’s Zhang Mo and USA’s Wu Yue. 2015 European champion Samara will fancy her chances of successfully negotiating the group stage but it is the head-to-head contest between Zhang and Wu that perhaps holds the most intrigue. Their three previous meetings have all favoured the Canadian, but Wu will be extra determined to avoid the same outcome this time out as she chases her first Women’s World Cup victory.
Twitter emoji up and running!
Off the back of a successful Twitter emoji campaign at April’s World Championships in Budapest, we are engaging followers once again throughout the Women’s World Cup!
Share your stories, moments and emotions with us during the event, using the hashtags #ITTFWorldCup, #Chengdu2019 and #LiftTheCup to see a special event emoji appear like magic in your tweet!
This time, there is also a unique hashtag for Japanese followers to enjoy using. The nation represents the ITTF’s largest fan base on Twitter, across the global @ittfworld and Japanese-language @ITTFJapan accounts.