Newspapers / University of North Carolina … / Sept. 22, 2005, edition 1 / Page 13
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Mike Hung enjoys a game of ping pong at UNCW's Sharkey's Game Room. Nolan Dean I THE SEAHAWK ARE YOU READY FOR SOME... Pingpong; Greg Dew Senior Staff Writer Sports fans were truly able to sit back and enjoy this past weekend. There were great baseball games, the US Open tennis tournament, WNBA playoffs, the NASCAR final regular season race and of course, the kickoff to the NFL sea son. One sport was a bit overshad owed during this truly unique and exciting sports weekend; ping- pong. Sharkey’s Game Room in asso ciation with Theta Chi Fraternity held the first inaugural Open Invitational pingpong tournament this past Sunday at the Warwick Center Ball Room. With over 80 applicants, this shaped up to be a tournament to remember. The tournament started at 7 p.m. and pitted friend against friend, and experts and non-experts alike, in search of a true pingpong cham pion. Zane Whitner, a junior in Theta Chi Fraternity, was the creator of this inaugural tournament, and felt a competition of this sort was need ed at UNCW. “There isn’t much love for the pingpong athlete,” Whitner said. “We we’re hoping to have some fun, see great pingpong, and enjoy the sport for what it is. I think we succeeded.” Opponents squared off in a best- of-three, single-elimination format on one of the three tables to deter mine who moved on. After nearly three-and-a-half hours it was down to the final two, Bart Wilson, a junior from Evans, Ga. and Brian Ford, a freshman from Greensboro N.C. Much trash talking and good- hearted fun ensued between these two competitors, as they were clear ly the best of the tournament. In the best-of-seven final. Ford emerged victorious, four games to two. The series was tied two games apiece when Ford won games five and six each by a two-point margin. “The finals could have gone either way,” Ford said. “It was a really good competition and a really good tournament. I’m going to try to win this thing all four years.” The real winner was the sport of table tennis. Many people have tables in their homes, or enjoy play ing when they get the chance, but there are few opportunities to play in a tournament or competition of this sort. Players are hoping that the game will catch on, and more people can get a chance to play. “We are going to have this tour nament years and semesters down the road,” Whitner said. “There are more pingpong players out there than you think, hopefully events like this will get even more people interested.”
University of North Carolina Wilmington Student Newspaper
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