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2017 World Table Tennis Championships – Men's singles

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Men's Singles
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Ma Long successfully defended his title by defeating Fan Zhendong 7–11, 11–6, 11–3, 11–8, 5–11, 7–11, 12–10 in the final.[1][2]

Medalists

Gold China Ma Long
Silver China Fan Zhendong
Bronze China Xu Xin
South Korea Lee Sang-su

Seeds

Matches were best of 7 games in qualification and in the 128-player sized main draw.[3][4]

  1. China Ma Long (Champion)
  2. China Fan Zhendong (Final)
  3. China Xu Xin (Semifinals)
  4. China Zhang Jike (Third round)
  5. Germany Dimitrij Ovtcharov (Fourth round)
  6. Japan Jun Mizutani (Second round)
  7. Hong Kong Wong Chun Ting (Quarterfinals)
  8. Germany Timo Boll (Quarterfinals)
  9. Chinese Taipei Chuang Chih-yuan (Fourth round)
  10. Japan Koki Niwa (Quarterfinals)
  11. South Korea Jeoung Young-sik (First round)
  12. Belarus Vladimir Samsonov (Fourth round)
  13. France Simon Gauzy (Second round)
  14. Portugal Marcos Freitas (Fourth round)
  15. Japan Kenta Matsudaira (First round)
  16. Portugal Tiago Apolónia (First round)
  17. South Korea Lee Sang-su (Semifinals)
  18. Austria Stefan Fegerl (Third round)
  19. Sweden Kristian Karlsson (First round)
  20. Ukraine Kou Lei (Second round)
  21. Brazil Hugo Calderano (Third round)
  22. Germany Bastian Steger (Second round)
  23. Sweden Mattias Karlsson (Third round)
  24. Japan Yuto Muramatsu (Third round)
  25. Chinese Taipei Chen Chien-an (Second round)
  26. Germany Ruwen Filus (Fourth round)
  27. Russia Alexander Shibaev (Third round)
  28. France Emmanuel Lebesson (Second round)
  29. Greece Panagiotis Gionis (Third round)
  30. Nigeria Quadri Aruna (Second round)
  31. Croatia Andrej Gaćina (Second round)
  32. South Korea Jang Woo-jin (Third round)
  33. China Lin Gaoyuan (Fourth round)
  34. Denmark Jonathan Groth (Third round)
  35. Singapore Gao Ning (Second round)
  36. Sweden Pär Gerell (Second round)
  37. England Paul Drinkhall (Second round)
  38. Germany Patrick Franziska (Second round)
  39. Portugal João Monteiro (Second round)
  40. Germany Ricardo Walther (Second round)
  41. England Liam Pitchford (First round)
  42. Austria Robert Gardos (Second round)
  43. India Sharath Kamal (Third round)
  44. South Korea Jeong Sang-eun (Fourth round)
  45. Slovenia Bojan Tokič (Second round)
  46. Poland Jakub Dyjas (Second round)
  47. Hong Kong Jiang Tianyi (Second round)
  48. Hong Kong Ho Kwan Kit (Second round)
  49. Poland Wang Zengyi (Second round)
  50. Egypt Omar Assar (Second round)
  51. Slovakia Wang Yang (Second round)
  52. Romania Adrian Crișan (First round)
  53. Japan Tomokazu Harimoto (Quarterfinals)
  54. Czech Republic Tomáš Konečný (First round)
  55. Austria Chen Weixing (Second round)
  56. Romania Ovidiu Ionescu (Third round)
  57. Iran Noshad Alamian (Second round)
  58. Portugal João Geraldo (Second round)
  59. Russia Grigory Vlasov (First round)
  60. Croatia Tomislav Pucar (First round)
  61. Romania Hunor Szőcs (Third round)
  62. India Soumyajit Ghosh (First round)
  63. Finland Benedek Oláh (Second round)
  64. South Korea Cho Seung-min (Second round)

Draw

Key

  • Q = Qualifier
  • w/o = Walkover
  • w/d = Withdraw
  • r = Retired
  • DQ = Disqualified

Finals

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Top half

Section 1

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Section 2

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Section 3

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Section 4

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Bottom half

Section 5

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Section 6

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Section 7

Template:16TeamBracket-Compact-Tennis7

Section 8

Template:16TeamBracket-Compact-Tennis7

References

  1. ^ "Press Release: Olympic Champion MA Long Defends Title at ITTF World Championships". ittf.com. 5 June 2017.
  2. ^ "Entry list". Archived from the original on 2017-05-12. Retrieved 2017-05-25.
  3. ^ "Playing system" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-03-29. Retrieved 2017-05-25.
  4. ^ Seeds

External links