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Big bang! The 96th player in the world ranking won the Japanese national championship, and Zhang Benzhi and the men's singles did not have medals

Big bang! The 96th player in the world ranking won the Japanese national championship, and Zhang Benzhi and the men's singles did not have medals

On the afternoon of January 30, Beijing time, the Japanese Table Tennis National Championships came to an end, in the final of the men's singles, former Japanese national team star Kenta Matsudaira appeared and played against the newly emerging big dark horse Toue Hayasuke last year, resulting in a 4-2 victory between the two sides after 6 rounds of vicious battles, thus becoming the new king of Japanese men's table tennis.

I have to say that this year's Men's Singles Event of the Japanese Table Tennis Championships is really very surprising, Olympic main Zhang Benzhi and stop the round of 16 have no medals, Niwa Takashi stopped the third place, Toue Hayabusa supplemented by the world's 96th ranking to win the final championship, it is really impressive, worthy of last year's consecutive wins Zhang Benzhihe, Mizutani Falcon, Niwa Takashi's big dark horse!

Big bang! The 96th player in the world ranking won the Japanese national championship, and Zhang Benzhi and the men's singles did not have medals

Kenta Matsudaira is a famous player who is more familiar to old fans, he has debuted in 2009, almost overturned the Olympic champion Marlene at the World Table Tennis Championships, and then finally eliminated Marlene at the 2013 World Table Tennis Championships, and then defeated the world champion Samsonov, almost pulling Xu Xin off the horse, but he never made it to the top three main players, and finally withdrew from the Japanese national team.

Toue Hayabusa is not very famous, but last year, he had won consecutive victories over the three olympic main players of the Japanese team, Zhang Benzhihe, Mizutani Hayabusa and Niwa Takashi, and this time the championship swept Niwa Takashi 4-0, and the momentum was like a rainbow. Kenta Matsudaira narrowly defeated world champion Makoto Yoshimura 4-3 and then competed with Hayabusa Tokami in the final to win the men's singles event.

Big bang! The 96th player in the world ranking won the Japanese national championship, and Zhang Benzhi and the men's singles did not have medals

After the game began, the two sides played very fiercely in the first set, and the score was chased by you, and as a result, Toue Hayabusa won the key ball and came out on top 11-9. In the second set, Hayabusa Toue was chased 8-8 by Kenta Matsudaira, who scored 2 consecutive points, 10-8 and was equalized by the opponent, followed by 2 consecutive points and 10-12 defeats, Matsudaira Kenta narrowly won to win back Ichijo.

In the third set, Toue Hayabusa regained his strength and clearly suppressed Kenta Matsudaira in terms of offensive quality, and then won 11-7. However, in the fourth set, the feng shui took turns, through constant changes to contain Tojo Hayabusa, and then equalized again 11-8, playing more and more wonderfully!

Big bang! The 96th player in the world ranking won the Japanese national championship, and Zhang Benzhi and the men's singles did not have medals

In the fifth set, Hayabusa Toue once again made the ball simplistic, not entangled too much with Kenta Matsudaira, and the 11-6 victory forced the opponent into a desperate situation. In the sixth set, Hayabusa Toue launched quickly and finally locked up the victory 11-6, beating Kenta Matsudaira to win the men's singles title: not simple, congratulations!

From a technical point of view, Matsudaira Kenta is known for dexterity and rapid connection, and Toue Hayabusa likes to be tough, so the key to the competition between the two is the rush, control and counter-control of the first three boards, Matsudaira Kenta's rotation changes are very strong, even Marlene has suffered a big loss, so Toue Hayabusa must "drop ten times in one force" - he did it.

So can Tojo Hayabusa, a civil war insider, also become a dark horse in the foreign war? Let's wait and see!

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