2011 World Table Tennis Championships – Men's doubles

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Men's Doubles
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The 2011 World Table Tennis Championships – Men's Doubles was the 51st edition of the men's doubles championship. [1] [2]

Chen Qi and Wang Hao were the defending champions. For this event, Chen partnered Ma Lin while Hao teamed up with Zhang Jike.

Ma Long and Xu Xin, who were runners-up in 2009, won in the final against Chen Qi and Ma Lin 11–3, 11–8, 4–11, 11–4, 11–7.[3]

Medalists

Gold China Ma Long
China Xu Xin
Silver China Chen Qi
China Ma Lin
Bronze South Korea Jung Young-Sik
South Korea Kim Min-Seok
China Wang Hao
China Zhang Jike

Seeds

Doubles matches will be best of 5 games in qualification matches and best of 7 games in the 64-player sized main draw.[4][5]

  1. China Ma Long / China Xu Xin (World Champions)
  2. China Wang Hao / China Zhang Jike (Semifinals)
  3. China Chen Qi / China Ma Lin (Final)
  4. Japan Seiya Kishikawa / Japan Jun Mizutani (Third Round)
  5. Hong Kong Jiang Tianyi / Hong Kong Tang Peng (Second Round)
  6. Japan Kenta Matsudaira / Japan Koki Niwa (Third Round)
  7. South Korea Lee Jung-Woo / South Korea Oh Sang-Eun (Quarterfinals)
  8. Hong Kong Cheung Yuk / Hong Kong Li Ching (Third Round)
  9. Singapore Gao Ning / Singapore Yang Zi (Third Round)
  10. Germany Patrick Baum / Germany Bastian Steger (Quarterfinals)
  11. Poland Lucjan Blaszczyk / Poland Wang Zeng Yi (Second Round)
  12. South Korea Ryu Seung-Min / South Korea Seo Hyun-Deok (Third Round)
  13. Germany Dimitrij Ovtcharov / Germany Christian Süß (First Round)
  14. Chinese Taipei Chuang Chih-yuan / Chinese Taipei Wu Chih-chi (Second Round)
  15. Denmark Jonathan Groth / Denmark Kasper Sternberg (Second Round)
  16. Sweden Pär Gerell / Sweden Jens Lundqvist (Third Round)
  17. Sweden Mattias Karlsson / Sweden Robert Svensson (Second Round)
  18. South Korea Jung Young-Sik / South Korea Kim Min-Seok (Semifinals)
  19. Ukraine Lei Kou / Ukraine Yevhen Pryshchepa (Second Round)
  20. France Emmanuel Lebesson / France Adrien Mattenet (Second Round)
  21. Austria Robert Gardos / Austria Daniel Habesohn (Third Round)
  22. Portugal Tiago Apolonia / Portugal Joao Monteiro (Second Round)
  23. Hong Kong Ko Lai Chak / Hong Kong Leung Chu Yan (Third Round)
  24. Belarus Pavel Platonov / Belarus Vladimir Samsonov (Quarterfinals)
  25. India Achanta Sharath Kamal / India Subhajit Saha (First Round)
  26. Russia Kirill Skachkov / Russia Alexey Smirnov (Second Round)
  27. North Korea Jang Song-Man / North Korea Kim Hyok-Bong (First Round)
  28. Russia Fedor Kuzmin / Russia Igor Rubtsov (Second Round)
  29. Czech Republic Petr Korbel / Czech Republic Dmitrij Prokopcov (First Round)
  30. Japan Kazuhiro Chan / Japan Kenji Matsudaira (Quarterfinals)
  31. Romania Adrian Crişan / Romania Andrei Filimon (First Round)
  32. Serbia Marko Jevtović / Serbia Aleksandar Karakašević (Second Round)

Draw

Key

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

Finals

Template:8TeamBracket-Compact-Tennis7

Top half

Section 1

Template:16TeamBracket-Compact-Tennis7

Section 2

Template:16TeamBracket-Compact-Tennis7

Bottom half

Section 3

Template:16TeamBracket-Compact-Tennis7

Section 4

Template:16TeamBracket-Compact-Tennis7

References

  1. ^ "List of Winners". All About Table Tennis.
  2. ^ "2011 results" (PDF). International Table Tennis Federation.
  3. ^ "One Step Higher for Ma Long and Xu Xin, Title Secured in Rotterdam". ittf.com. 2011-05-14. Archived from the original on 2012-08-19. Retrieved 2011-05-19.
  4. ^ "2011 World TT Championships Playing System" (PDF). ITTF. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 March 2011. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  5. ^ "2011 WTTC Seeds - Men's Doubles". ittf.com. Retrieved 31 May 2011.

External links