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Ping-pong and the riddle of victory

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    Every other night in Japan
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    I step out of my apartment,
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    I climb up a hill for 15 minutes,
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    and then I head into my local health club,
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    where three ping-pong tables
    are set up in a studio.
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    And space is limited,
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    so at every table
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    one pair of players practices forehands,
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    another practices backhands,
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    and every now and then,
    the balls collide in midair
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    and everybody says,
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    "Wow!"
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    Then, choosing lots,
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    we select partners and play doubles.
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    But I honestly couldn't
    tell you who's won,
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    because we change partners
    every five minutes.
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    And everybody is trying really hard
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    to win points
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    but nobody is keeping track
    of who is winning games.
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    And after an hour or so
    of furious exertion,
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    I can honestly tell you
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    that not knowing who has won
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    feels like the ultimate victory.
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    In Japan, it's been said
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    they've created a competitive spirit
    without competition.
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    Now, all of you know that geopolitics
    is best followed by watching ping-pong.
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    (Laughter)
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    The two strongest powers in the world
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    were fiercest enemies
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    until, in 1972, an American ping-pong team
    was allowed to visit Communist China.
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    And as soon as the former adversaries
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    were gathered around
    some small green tables,
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    each of them could claim a victory,
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    and the whole world
    could breathe more easily.
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    China's leader, Mao Tse-tung,
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    wrote a whole manual on ping-pong,
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    and he called the sport
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    "a spiritual nuclear weapon."
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    And it's been said that the only
    honorary lifelong member
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    of the US Table Tennis Association
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    is the then-President Richard Nixon,
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    who helped to engineer
    this win-win situation
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    through ping-pong diplomacy.
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    But long before that,
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    really the history of the modern world
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    was best told through
    the bouncing white ball.
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    Ping-pong sounds like
    a cousin of sing-song,
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    like something Eastern,
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    but actually it's believed
    that it was invented by high-class Brits
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    during Victorian times,
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    who started hitting wine corks
    over walls of books after dinner.
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    (Laughter)
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    No exaggeration.
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    And by the end of World War I,
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    the sport was dominated by players
    from the former Austro-Hungarian Empire:
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    eight of our nine
    early world championships
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    were claimed by Hungary.
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    And Eastern Europeans grew so adept
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    at hitting back everything
    that was hit at them
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    that they almost brought
    the whole sport to a standstill.
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    In one championship match
    in Prague in 1936,
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    the first point is said to have lasted
    two hours and 12 minutes.
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    The first point!
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    Longer than a Mad Max movie.
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    And according to one of the players,
    the umpire had to retire with a sore neck
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    before the point was concluded.
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    (Laughter)
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    That player started hitting
    the ball back with his left hand
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    and dictating chess moves between shots.
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    Many in the audience
    started, of course, filing out,
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    as that single point lasted
    maybe 12,000 strokes,
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    and an emergency meeting of
    the International Table Tennis Association
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    had to be held then and there,
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    and soon the rules were changed
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    so that no game could last
    longer than 20 minutes.
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    Sixteen years later,
    Japan entered the picture
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    when a little-known
    watchmaker called Hiroji Satoh
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    showed up at the world championships
    in Bombay in 1952.
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    And Satoh was not very big,
    he wasn't highly rated,
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    he was wearing spectacles,
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    but he was armed with a paddle
    that was not pimpled,
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    as other paddles were,
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    but covered by a thick spongy rubber foam.
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    And thanks to this
    silencing secret weapon,
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    the little-known Satoh won a gold medal.
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    One million people came out
    into the streets of Tokyo
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    to greet him up on his return,
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    and really Japan's postwar resurgence
    was set into motion.
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    What I learned though
    at my regular games in Japan
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    is more what could be called
    the inner sport of global domination,
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    sometimes known as life.
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    We never play singles in our club,
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    only doubles,
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    and because, as I say,
    we change partners every five minutes,
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    if you do happen to lose,
    you're very likely to win
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    six minutes later.
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    We also play best-of-two sets,
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    so often there's no loser at all.
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    Ping-pong diplomacy.
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    And I always remember that as a boy
    growing up in England, I was taught
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    that the point of a game was to win,
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    but in Japan I'm encouraged to believe
    that really the point of a game
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    is to make as many people as possible
    around you feel that they are winners.
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    So you're not careening up and down
    as an individual might,
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    but you're part of a regular,
    steady chorus.
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    The most skillful players in our club
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    deploy their skills to turn
    a 9-1 lead for their team
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    into a 9-9 game in which everybody
    is intensely involved,
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    and my friend who hits
    these high looping lobs
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    that smaller players flail at and miss,
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    well he wins a lot of points,
    but I think he's thought of as a loser.
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    In Japan, a game of ping-pong
    is really like an act of love.
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    You're learning how to play with somebody,
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    rather than against her.
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    And I'll confess at first
    this seemed to me
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    to take all the fun out of the sport.
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    I couldn't exult after a tremendous upset
    victory against our strongest players,
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    because six minutes later
    with a new partner
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    I was falling behind again.
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    On the other hand,
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    I never felt disconsolate,
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    and when I flew away from Japan
    and started playing singles again
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    with my English arch-rival,
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    I noticed that after every defeat,
    I was really broken-hearted.
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    But after every victory,
    I couldn't sleep either
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    because I knew there was
    only one way to go,
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    and that was down.
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    Now, if I were trying to do
    business in Japan,
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    this would lead to endless frustration.
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    In Japan, unlike elsewhere,
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    if the score is still level
    after four hours,
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    a baseball game ends in a tie,
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    and because the league standings
    are based on winning percentage,
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    a team with quite a few ties
    can finish ahead of a team
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    with more victories.
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    One of the first times an American
    was ever brought over to Japan
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    to lead a professional
    Japanese baseball team,
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    Bobby Valentine in 1995,
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    he took this really mediocre squad,
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    he lead them to a stunning
    second-place finish,
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    and he was instantly fired.
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    Why?
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    Well, said the team spokesman,
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    because of his emphasis on winning.
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    Official Japan can feel quite a lot
    like that points that was said to last
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    two hours and 12 minutes,
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    and playing not to lose
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    can take all the imagination,
    the daring, the excitement out of things.
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    At the same time,
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    playing ping-pong in Japan
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    reminds me why choirs
    regularly enjoy more fun
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    than soloists.
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    In a choir, your only job is to play
    your small part perfectly,
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    to hit your notes with feeling,
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    and by so doing to help to create
    a beautiful harmony
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    that's much greater
    than the sum of its parts.
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    Yes, every choir does need a conductor,
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    but I think a choir releases you
    from a child's simple sense of either-ors.
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    You come to see that
    the opposite of winning isn't losing,
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    it's failing to see the larger picture.
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    As my life goes on,
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    I'm really startled to see that no event
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    can properly be assessed
    for years after it has unfolded.
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    I once lost everything
    I owned in the world,
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    every last thing, in a wildfire.
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    But in time, I came to see
    that it was that seeming loss
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    that allowed me to live
    on the Earth more gently,
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    to write without notes,
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    and actually to move to Japan
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    and the inner health club
    known as the ping-pong table.
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    Conversely, I once stumbled
    into the perfect job
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    and I came to see that seeming happiness
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    can stand in the way of true joy
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    even more than misery does.
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    Playing doubles in Japan
    really relieves me of all my anxiety,
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    and at the end of an evening,
    I notice everybody is filing out
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    in a more or less equal state of delight.
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    I'm reminded every night
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    that not getting ahead
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    isn't the same thing as falling behind
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    any more than not being lively
    is the same thing as being dead.
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    And I've come to understand why it is
    that Chinese universities
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    are said to offer degrees in ping-pong,
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    and why researchers
    have found that ping-pong
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    can actually help a little
    with mild mental disorders
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    and even autism.
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    But as I watch the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo,
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    I'm going to be keenly aware
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    that it won't be possible
    to tell who's won or who's lost
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    for a very long time.
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    You remember that point I mentioned
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    that was said to last
    for two hours and 12 minutes?
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    Well, one of the players from that game
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    ended up six years later
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    in the concentration camps
    of Auschwitz and Dachau.
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    But he walked out alive.
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    Why?
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    Simply because a guard in the gas chamber
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    recognized him from
    his ping-pong playing days.
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    Had he been the winner of that epic match?
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    It hardly mattered.
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    As you recall, many people had filed out
    before even the first point was concluded.
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    The only thing that saved him
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    was the fact that he took part.
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    The best way to win any game,
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    Japan tells me every other night,
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    is never, never to think about the score.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Ping-pong and the riddle of victory
Speaker:
Pico Iyer
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
12:43
  • 00:06:01,187 00:06:04,532
    So you're not careening up and down as an individual might,

    "Careening" should be written "creating"

    Thanks

English subtitles

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