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2011 World Table Tennis Championships – Mixed doubles

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Mixed Doubles
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The 2011 World Table Tennis Championships – Mixed Doubles was the 51st edition of the mixed doubles championship.[1] [2] [3]

Li Ping and Cao Zhen were the defending champions. Li did not compete this year and Cao instead teamed up with Zhang Chao.

Zhang Chao and Cao Zhen won in the final against Hao Shuai and Mu Zi 11–7, 11–7, 11–9, 9–11, 11–8. Thus Cao retained her title from 2009 with her second consecutive gold medal in the Mixed Doubles event.[4]

Medalists

Gold China Zhang Chao
China Cao Zhen
Silver China Hao Shuai
China Mu Zi
Bronze Hong Kong Cheung Yuk
Hong Kong Jiang Huajun
Japan Seiya Kishikawa
Japan Ai Fukuhara

Seeds

Matches will be best of 5 games in qualification matches and best of 7 games in the 128-player sized main draw.[5][6]

  1. China Hao Shuai / China Mu Zi (Final)
  2. China Zhang Chao / China Cao Zhen (World Champions)
  3. Hong Kong Cheung Yuk / Hong Kong Jiang Huajun (Semifinals)
  4. Japan Seiya Kishikawa / Japan Ai Fukuhara (Semifinals)
  5. Hong Kong Tang Peng / Hong Kong Tie Ya Na (Third Round)
  6. Japan Kenta Matsudaira / Japan Kasumi Ishikawa (Fourth Round)
  7. Singapore Yang Zi / Singapore Wang Yuegu (Quarterfinals)
  8. China Yan An / China Feng Yalan (Fourth Round)
  9. Singapore Gao Ning / Singapore Li Jiawei (Fourth Round)
  10. Chinese Taipei Chuang Chih-yuan / Chinese Taipei Cheng I-ching (Fourth Round)
  11. South Korea Kim Min-Seok / South Korea Yang Ha-Eun (Third Round)
  12. South Korea Lee Jung-Woo / South Korea Lee Eun-Hee (Fourth Round)
  13. South Korea Seo Hyun-Deok / South Korea Seok Ha-Jung (Quarterfinals)
  14. Turkey Bora Vang / Turkey Sirin He (Third Round)
  15. Belarus Evgueni Chtchetinine / Belarus Viktoria Pavlovich (Quarterfinals)
  16. Romania Andrei Filimon / Romania Elizabeta Samara (Third Round)
  17. Slovakia Lubomir Pistej / Slovakia Eva Ódorová (Second Round)
  18. Belarus Vitaly Nekhvedovich / Belarus Veronika Pavlovich (Third Round)
  19. Serbia Žolt Pete / Serbia Gabriela Feher (Second Round)
  20. Spain Carlos Machado / Spain Shen Yanfei (Third Round)
  21. Romania Adrian Crişan / Romania Daniela Dodean (Third Round)
  22. Hong Kong Jiang Tianyi / Hong Kong Lee Ho Ching (Fourth Round)
  23. Chinese Taipei Huang Sheng-sheng / Chinese Taipei Huang Yi-hua (Fourth Round)
  24. Russia Igor Rubtsov / Russia Anna Tikhomirova (Second Round)
  25. Hungary Janos Jakab / Hungary Georgina Póta (Third Round)
  26. Czech Republic Petr Korbel / Czech Republic Renata Strbikova (Second Round)
  27. Russia Fedor Kuzmin / Russia Oxana Fadeeva (Third Round)
  28. Japan Kenji Matsudaira / Japan Misako Wakamiya (Third Round)
  29. North Korea Kim Hyok-Bong / North Korea Kim Jong (Quarterfinals)
  30. Germany Zoltan Fejer-Konnerth / Germany Zhenqi Barthel (Third Round)
  31. Czech Republic Tomas Konecny / Czech Republic Iveta Vacenovska (Second Round)
  32. Dominican Republic Lin Ju / Dominican Republic Wu Xue (Third Round)
  33. France Emmanuel Lebesson / France Carole Grundisch (Third Round)
  34. Poland Wang Zeng Yi / Poland Natalia Partyka (Third Round)
  35. Croatia Andrej Gacina / Croatia Cornelia Molnar (First Round, withdrew)
  36. Austria Stefan Fegerl / Austria Li Qiangbing (Second Round)
  37. Russia Alexander Shibaev / Russia Anastasia Voronova (Second Round)
  38. Sweden Mattias Karlsson / Sweden Matilda Ekholm (Second Round)
  39. India Achanta Sharath Kamal / India Shamini Kumaresan (Second Round)
  40. Slovakia Thomas Keinath / Slovakia Barbora Balazova (Second Round)
  41. Hungary Daniel Kosiba / Hungary Petra Lovas (First Round)
  42. North Korea Ri Chol-Guk / North Korea Kim Hye-Song (Second Round)
  43. Serbia Marko Jevtović / Serbia Anamaria Erdelji (Second Round)
  44. Spain Alfredo Carneros / Spain Sara Ramirez (Second Round)
  45. Poland Jakub Kosowski / Poland Katarzyna Grzybowska (Third Round)
  46. Spain Jesus Cantero / Spain Galia Dvorak (Second Round)
  47. Germany Ruwen Filus / Germany Kathrin Muhlbach (Second Round)
  48. Turkey Jiang Pengfei / Turkey Melek Hu (Second Round)
  49. Czech Republic Pavel Sirucek / Czech Republic Dana Hadačová (Second Round)
  50. England Paul Drinkhall / England Joanna Parker (Second Round)
  51. Singapore Pang Xue Jie / Singapore Yu Mengyu (Fourth Round)
  52. Chinese Taipei Chen Chien-an / Chinese Taipei Liu Hsing-yin (Second Round)
  53. Australia William Henzell / Australia Lay Jian Fang (Second Round)
  54. Romania Ovidiu Ionescu / Romania Bernadette Szocs (Third Round)
  55. Croatia Tomislav Kolarek / Croatia Tian Yuan (Second Round)
  56. France Quentin Robinot / France Aurore Dessaint (Second Round)
  57. Belarus Pavel Platonov / Belarus Alexandra Privalova (Second Round)
  58. England Darius Knight / England Kelly Sibley (Second Round)
  59. Ukraine Ivan Katkov / Ukraine Ganna Gaponova (Second Round)
  60. Brazil Gustavo Tsuboi / Brazil Jessica Yamada (First Round)
  61. Egypt Omar Assar / Egypt Dina Meshref (Second Round)
  62. Brazil Cazuo Matsumoto / Brazil Ligia Silva (Second Round)
  63. India Amalraj Anthony / India Madhurika Patkar (First Round)
  64. Malaysia Muhd Shakirin Ibrahim / Malaysia Beh Lee Wei (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

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Section 8

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References

  1. ^ "List of Winners". All About Table Tennis.
  2. ^ "Mixed doubles results" (PDF). International Table Tennis Federation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-06-09.
  3. ^ "Table Tennis World Championship medal winners". Sports123.
  4. ^ "Different Partner but Once Again Mixed Doubles Gold for Cao Zhen". ittf.com. 2011-05-13. Archived from the original on 2012-10-16. Retrieved 2011-05-19.
  5. ^ "2011 World TT Championships Playing System" (PDF). ITTF. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 March 2011. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  6. ^ "2011 WTTC Seeds – Mixed Doubles". ittf.com. Retrieved 8 May 2011.