Site Products
World Cup Invitations: Kanak Jha to Join World’s Best in Chengdu

Review 2018: Graduation year for Kanak Jha

Posted on

Review 2018: Graduation year for Kanak Jha
(by Ian Marshall, Editor)

It was not the finish to the year for which Kanak Jha had hoped; a second round exit in the Boys’ Singles event at the World Junior Championships followed by a third round Men’s Singles defeat in Orlando at the United States Open; the results did not give cause for celebration.

However, looking back over the year as a whole, the teenager can reflect most positively on the progress made and the success gained.

Born in 2000; many will refer to the year in which the 18th birthday is celebrated as the last in the junior ranks; that is true but it is negative thinking. It is the year when you make a major step forward to become established in the senior ranks, in that year you need to be able to compete with seasoned players of pedigree. Success at junior level is welcome but should that not be considered more a bonus than a priority?

Astutely guided by Stefan Feth and Jörg Bitzegio, it was such a policy that Kanak Jha followed in 2018; he did not appear on the ITTF World Junior Circuit, only being present in junior events when the nation called. Notably, in February, he emerged successful at the 2017 ITTF World Junior Circuit Finals in Luxembourg, before in July in Santo Domingo. he won the Boys’ Singles title at the Pan American Junior Championships for the third consecutive year. In both he proved step ahead of the field.

However, the true mark of Kanak Jha’s quality was his response when pressure really mounted, when it was his one and only chance. Is there a contest of greater pressure that the bronze medal match? On the one hand you have to recover from the disappointment of a semi-final defeat; additionally, if you reach the final, you have the cushion of a silver medal, lose the third place contest and the cupboard is bare.

For full article, please click here

Latest News

A Forehand Stance While Blocking

June 1, 2026
(By Larry Hodges, Member of US Table Tennis Hall of Fame Many players go into a backhand stance… Read More

Does Watching High-Level Players Help Amateur Players Improve? By Coach Bob Chen

June 1, 2026
(By Coach Bob Chen) Many amateur players enjoy watching high-level matches. They watch world-class rallies. They study professional… Read More

US Nationals Preview: Two Weeks Until the June 16 Entry Deadline

June 1, 2026
(by Steve Hopkins, graphic USATT) Action is set to start on July 3rd in San Jose for this… Read More

WAB CLUB FEATURE: Table Tennis & More

May 31, 2026
(By Steve Hopkins) Table Tennis & More (TT&M) was founded by Len Winkler in 1996. Over the years,… Read More

Triple Crown for Saarbrucken – TTBL Champion

May 31, 2026
(by Steve Hopkins, photo TTBL via BeLa Sportfoto) FC Saarbrucken TT won the Final Four, securing the German… Read More

What should be your goal when the ball comes high?

May 28, 2026
Robot plays very high balls to very long Backhand. ( 20-25 balls per minute) FETHOMANIA 27: Drill 2… Read More

Angel Naranjo – Serve Return & Forehand Loop

May 28, 2026
(by: Bowmar Sports) In this Butterfly Training Tips, Angel Naranjo is executing a over the table push, followed… Read More

Anav Gupta – Backhand Flip & Backhand Loop Combo

May 26, 2026
(by: Bowmar Sports) In this Butterfly Training Tips, Anav Gupta is executing a drill where he will Backhand… Read More
View All News

Get the latest from Butterfly

Stay “In The Loop” with Butterfly professional table tennis equipment, table tennis news, table tennis technology, tournament results, and We Are Butterfly players, coaches, clubs and more.