Table Tennis England The Winning Edge Issue 7 | Page 8

THE WINNING EDGE INNOVATE TO A coach’s job doesn’t have to end with training the players in front you. The following pages are packed with examples and ideas of going beyond the club scene to find a new crowd, and a new challenge. DECAMPING TO DECATHLON A s the success of Ping! has shown, table tennis is a brilliant sport to introduce to an unsuspecting general public. While that project is often separate to local coaches and clubs, the idea of transporting the sport to a ‘real world’ environment is one Bolton TTC has ran with. “Our head coach, Andrea Holt, got funding for me to do free coaching outside of our normal sessions, to grow table tennis in Bolton and grow the club,” explained Sam Evans, one of the club’s coaches. “The problem with club nights is that, for some people, they have that stigma of it being a place for ‘training’, which can put casual players off.” So how do you run a table tennis session without a sports or school hall and with no players booked in to play? UV TABLE TENNIS Another of Bolton TTC’s successful alternative sessions has been UV table tennis, set-up in conjunction with the local university. The plan? Set the hall up with UV (ultraviolet) bulbs, turn off all other non-essential lighting and play in the glow! “We already had a relationship with the manager of our local Decathlon sports shop, which has a table tennis section and was clearly going to be good place to meet the public. It might not be as bustling as somewhere like a marketplace but it had all the equipment we needed, bar the robot, so we didn’t have transport or material costs to worry about. “We let people come over who were walking around, or if it was quiet we’d walk around and speak to shoppers. We also set up a robot challenge, with Decathlon vouchers as a prize.” That incentive, which was a plan formed in tandem with the store manager, and the busy location kept a steady stream of participants coming through, with 15 regular players six weeks after they’d first set up. VIDEO It was also a positive experience for Sam as a coach, and one he’d recommend to any club coaches looking to expand their skillset. “It allows you to not take yourself too seriously. To just be professional and accept the diversity that’s out there in the public. Use your experience as a coach to be flexible with the different kinds of people: you certainly can’t just coach as you would with regular club players.” WE