Chang lost to his 19-year-old peers and was inspired by the world champion to win the tiebreaker
Japanese table tennis player Tomokazu Changmoto, the roar in the game is endless, everyone knows. Unexpectedly, he won the game this time and took off his clothes to celebrate bare-chested like a football player! However, it looks white and flowers, and there are no obvious muscles.
In Japan's 2022-2023 T-League Playoffs Men's Finals, Ryukyu Astida defeated Kinoshita Meister Tokyo 3-2, and Ryukyu won the championship!
Tomokazu Chang was shaved 3-0 in the third set by his peer Shinozuka Daitō to put the Ryuki team on the edge of the cliff. Looking at the score of five games, the Brazilian kid Hugo is too weak, he lost two consecutive games to put Ryukyu on the championship, which can be said to "save" Tomokazu Chang. Of course, teammate Maharu Yoshimura (mixed doubles champion of the 17th World Championships) narrowly defeated Hugo in the fourth game, and was also a big contributor to the Ryu team. A digression: Maharu Yoshimura, who cheated in marriage earlier, is undoubtedly a scumbag, and the competition is very resistible.
1st Article: Maharu Yoshimura / Kazuhiro Yoshimura 2:1 Yuya Ohtake / Daito Shinozuka
Game 2: Kazuki Hamada 1:3 and Reiki Kawa
3rd: Tomokazu Uramoto 0:3 Daito Shinozuka (8:11,7:11,8:11)
Race 4: Maharu Yoshimura 3:2 Hugo
Game 5: Tomokazu Chang 1:0 Hugo (11:4)
Over time, Japan's aces in 2023, Tomokazu Changmoto and Mimato Ito, seem to have signs of "fading". Is it that the height is cold, and it has been thoroughly studied by the opponents?
19-year-old Shinozuka Daden, a clean sheet "veteran" of the same age, Tomokazu Changmoto, is amazing enough. Hayabusa Mizutani and Koki Niwa retired, and the rejuvenation of the Japanese table tennis team is more obvious.
[Japanese table tennis men's world ranking, last week's ranking in parentheses]:
Tomokazu Chang: 4th (4th)
Yukiya Uda: 20th (20th)
Shinozuka Daiden: 29-bit (29-bit)
Hayasuke Togami: 40 (49 bit)
Hayato Wooden: 73rd (76th)
Yuta Tanaka: 74th (69th)
Ruiji Wakawa: 76-bit (73-bit)
Maharu Yoshimura: 134th (129th)
Satoshi Eida: 136th (133rd)
Yoshiyama: 138 (135)
Masataka Morien: 142 (140)
Kazuhiro Yoshimura: 146th (145th)
Suzuki: 166-bit (164-bit)
Shinjoya: 174-bit (173-bit)
Matsushima Kaku: 217-bit (216-bit)
Satoshi Yokotani: 250th (250th)
Table tennis net Hu Qingyuan