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NWT table tennis team set for Canada Winter Games

It's been a couple of years since the NWT last competed in table tennis at the Canada Winter Games.

This year could also be the last time we see a team from the NWT at the Canada Games in table tennis.

Nikkilesh Gohil returns a backhand during a drill as part of the Canada Winter Games table tennis trials at St. Pat's Gymnasium on Sunday. James McCarthy/NNSL photo
Nikkilesh Gohil returns a backhand during a drill as part of the Canada Winter Games table tennis trials at St. Pat's Gymnasium on Sunday.
James McCarthy/NNSL photo

Table Tennis North hosted its second and final set of trials for the big show in Red Deer, Alta., this coming February at St. Pat's Gymnasium this past weekend and from those trials came six players who will don the territory's colours.

The final list wasn't available as of press time but Thorsten Gohl, Table Tennis North's executive director, confirmed three boys and three girls have been chosen.

Gohl said the emphasis isn't about winning but about being a good team.

“We want the kids to have a good experience, do the best they can, cheer for their teammates and enjoy everything about it,” he said.

The team was chosen using a mixture of skills and tournament play with points up for grabs in each discipline. Every skills camp a player took part in was worth five points to a maximum of 20 points per weekend of trials. There were also a tournament in every trial weekend with points awarded for a top-eight finish. The winner of a tournament received 10 points, runner-up eight points and all the way down to one point for eighth place.

If a player went to every skills camp and won both tournaments, they could max out at 60 points.

Gohl said the trials in both Fort Providence last month and this past weekend went as well as they could have.

“It was great to see the kids get out there and playing,” he said. “From the first set of trials to now, the improvement is obvious and that's the key. They need to be playing other kids and getting game experience.”

The players themselves know they won't be in contention for a medal of any sort and there are no illusions of grandeur among them.

Nikkilesh Gohil, who was one of the boys who made the final cut, said he's just looking to play some of the future stars of the sport in Canada.

“I'm going to be playing against future Olympians and national team members,” he said. “I'm just hoping to play well against them and maybe score a couple of points off of them if I'm lucky.”

The traditional powerhouses of table tennis in Canada are Ontario, B.C., and Quebec with strong teams coming out of Alberta and Manitoba, said Gohl.

“Those provinces know they're the top ones because they're participating in all of the big national events,” he said. “Our kids will be playing in a major national event for the first time in Red Deer so they'll be nervous but this will be exciting for them. All 13 provinces and territories will be there.”

According to the Canada Games Council, the last time the NWT competed in table tennis was 1979 and while it will be 40 years when the Games in Red Deer begin since the territory last played, it could be the last time for a while as table tennis will not be a part of the program for the 2023 Games.

Gohl said Table Tennis Canada is trying to re-enter the sport for the 2025 Canada Summer Games.

“This will be a big one for our kids because it could be the last one we get to play in for a long time,” he said. “Table Tennis Canada is trying its best to get it back and if we do get back, we'll become a summer sport.”



About the Author: James McCarthy

I'm the managing editor with NNSL Media and have been so since 2022.
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