Chess and Table Tennis
In sports like chess and table tennis, everything relies upon the individual player. Not surprisingly, therefore, tennis and and table tennis are among those individual sports that have always seemed most attractive to chess players. Many chess players were fans of tennis, including Capablanca, Ed Lasker, and Boris Spassky. Bobby Fischer swam and bowled alone. He also played table tennis.
Poets, and anyone who ever exercises a creative and individual professions, have in common with chess players total responsibility for their actions. This happens rarely, or does not happen at all in other human activities, whether they be paid and serious or unpaid and playful. Perhaps it is not by chance that tennis players, for example, who play alone or at most in pairs, are more irascible and neurotic than soccer players or cyclists, who work in teams. … Whoever is on his own, without allies or intermediaries between himself and his work, has no excuses in the face of failure, and excuses are a precious analgesic. The actor can unload the blame of a failure on his director, or vice versa; someone who works in an industry feels his responsibility diluted in that of numerous colleagues, superiors and inferiors, and moreover contaminated by “contingency,” competition, and the whims of the market, and the unforeseen. Someone who teaches can blame the program, the dean, and of course the students. …But the person who decides to attack with the bishop, the point he considers weak in his opponent’s deployment, is alone, he has no accomplices, not even putative, and fully and singly answers for his decision, like the poet at his writing table faced by “the tiny verse” (144).
Bruce Schauble made a similar connection recently on his blog, which reminded me of Levi’s essay:
What I like about chess: there are no excuses. There is no luck involved. Either you play well or you don’t. If you screw up, it’s on you. It’s a very pure game in that respect.
As anyone who has missed a slam despite a perfect set-up can tell you, ping pong feels the same way. There are many other reasons why table tennis seems the most analogous to chess of all games.
Both chess and table tennis are played within the confines of a physical space that you can grasp completely within your field of vision. There is nothing hidden in either game. Yet, paradoxically, in order to play both successfully you need to grasp the image of the board or the table in your mind so that you actually have a feel for where the corners are. In chess we call this “board vision,” and table tennis definitely has its “table vision.” How else can a practiced player get the ball deep into the corner of the table with a mere flick of the wrist? The player knows exactly where that corner is in the same way good drivers know where their car bumpers are when they parallel park on a crowded city street. The dimensions are held within your mind and translated automatically to physical action.
Players exhibit some of the same stylistic tendencies in both games. My problems in table tennis are the same that I have in chess: I rely too much on my openings (or my serves) and too often try to attack without first gaining a position of strength on the board. As I played various opponents I started thinking that they had the same idiosyncrasies and stylistic approaches in both games. Mark Kernighan is a blocker and plays table tennis with the same rope-a-dope style that he brings to chess, laying back and passively returning until his opponent over-commits enough that he can “hit him where he ain’t.” And Yaacov Norowitz just plays both games incredibly fast….
There is also a historical connection between the two games, as they both benefitted enormously from 1970s Cold War events (1971’s “ping pong diplomacy” and 1972’s Fischer – Spassky match) that elevated their profile and status in the media and exposed the same generation of folks to both games. And members of that generation are the ones who inhabit our club.
Perhaps it is this last reason why I think we are going to be playing some more table tennis at the club in the years to come.
No related posts.
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.




