Assessing the Relevance of Scores in Table Tennis: Theoretical Framework and Empirical Evidence

The score is an indispensable element in competitive sports, playing a crucial role in determining the outcome of a match. However, the importance of scores in table tennis remains unexplored, as the hundreds of possible score scenarios in a single set make it especially challenging to assess their...

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Main Authors: Ruizhi Liu, Miran Kondric, Martin Lames
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2025-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10978854/
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author Ruizhi Liu
Miran Kondric
Martin Lames
author_facet Ruizhi Liu
Miran Kondric
Martin Lames
author_sort Ruizhi Liu
collection DOAJ
description The score is an indispensable element in competitive sports, playing a crucial role in determining the outcome of a match. However, the importance of scores in table tennis remains unexplored, as the hundreds of possible score scenarios in a single set make it especially challenging to assess their significance scientifically. This study is the first attempt to quantify the relevance of all possible scores in table tennis matches through probabilistic computing and empirical verification. Depending on the overall winning probability, relevance values were determined for the 121 possible scores. An extensive dataset consisting of 1,364 matches and 103,772 individual scores from top-level table tennis was examined to test the empirical winning probabilities of each score. The results highlight a significant correlation between the theoretical score relevance and players’ empirical winning probabilities. Winners perform better at more relevant scores, such as close scores or crunch time, with this trend being more pronounced among male players. Z-tests were used to identify scores with positive or negative deviations from the average scoring rate. Individual players show considerable variation in scoring performance across different score situations. These findings provide significant implications for players’ training and competition. The approach presented in this study can also be applied to other scoring games and sports.
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spelling doaj-art-975f136bd1c84a909e8b63f1c8767e212025-08-20T02:14:45ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362025-01-0113758857589310.1109/ACCESS.2025.356376810978854Assessing the Relevance of Scores in Table Tennis: Theoretical Framework and Empirical EvidenceRuizhi Liu0https://orcid.org/0009-0004-3497-0598Miran Kondric1https://orcid.org/0009-0004-8541-6677Martin Lames2China Table Tennis College, Shanghai University of Sport, Shanghai, ChinaFaculty of Sport, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, SloveniaSchool of Medicine and Health, Technical University of Munich, Munich, GermanyThe score is an indispensable element in competitive sports, playing a crucial role in determining the outcome of a match. However, the importance of scores in table tennis remains unexplored, as the hundreds of possible score scenarios in a single set make it especially challenging to assess their significance scientifically. This study is the first attempt to quantify the relevance of all possible scores in table tennis matches through probabilistic computing and empirical verification. Depending on the overall winning probability, relevance values were determined for the 121 possible scores. An extensive dataset consisting of 1,364 matches and 103,772 individual scores from top-level table tennis was examined to test the empirical winning probabilities of each score. The results highlight a significant correlation between the theoretical score relevance and players’ empirical winning probabilities. Winners perform better at more relevant scores, such as close scores or crunch time, with this trend being more pronounced among male players. Z-tests were used to identify scores with positive or negative deviations from the average scoring rate. Individual players show considerable variation in scoring performance across different score situations. These findings provide significant implications for players’ training and competition. The approach presented in this study can also be applied to other scoring games and sports.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10978854/Performance analysisscore importancetheoretical and practicalwinning probability
spellingShingle Ruizhi Liu
Miran Kondric
Martin Lames
Assessing the Relevance of Scores in Table Tennis: Theoretical Framework and Empirical Evidence
IEEE Access
Performance analysis
score importance
theoretical and practical
winning probability
title Assessing the Relevance of Scores in Table Tennis: Theoretical Framework and Empirical Evidence
title_full Assessing the Relevance of Scores in Table Tennis: Theoretical Framework and Empirical Evidence
title_fullStr Assessing the Relevance of Scores in Table Tennis: Theoretical Framework and Empirical Evidence
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the Relevance of Scores in Table Tennis: Theoretical Framework and Empirical Evidence
title_short Assessing the Relevance of Scores in Table Tennis: Theoretical Framework and Empirical Evidence
title_sort assessing the relevance of scores in table tennis theoretical framework and empirical evidence
topic Performance analysis
score importance
theoretical and practical
winning probability
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10978854/
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AT mirankondric assessingtherelevanceofscoresintabletennistheoreticalframeworkandempiricalevidence
AT martinlames assessingtherelevanceofscoresintabletennistheoreticalframeworkandempiricalevidence