Published: 17:30, June 15, 2022 | Updated: 19:12, June 15, 2022
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Ping-Pong Diplomacy rekindled in Houston
By May Zhou in Houston

Scott Preiss (left), Jan Berris (center) and Virginia Sung pose for photos at the awards ceremony of the USA Table Tennis Ping Pong Diplomacy Team Championships Tour in Houston on June 12, 2022. (MAY ZHOU / CHINA DAILY)

The story of the small ball moving the big ball continued in Houston over the weekend in the latest chapter of Ping-Pong Diplomacy.

Professional and amateur table tennis players opened the USA Table Tennis Ping Pong Diplomacy Team Championships Tour to commemorate the 50th anniversary of former US president Richard Nixon's historic visit to China in 1972.

About 20 teams are competing in the tour, including USATT members Nikhil Kumar and Lily Zhang, who holds five US National Championship titles

Wang Xiaofeng, political counselor from the Chinese embassy in Washington, said he hopes the event will inform more young people about the history of Ping Pong Diplomacy. "The story of 'a small ball moving the big ball', that Ping Pong Diplomacy promoted the normalization of China-US relations and profoundly changed the international landscape," he said.

"Today, the big ball of China-US relations still needs the small ping pong ball to move it forward, from which we see the strategic vision, political courage and people's friendship reflected in Ping Pong Diplomacy back then. This is why our commemoration is highly relevant today."

The idea for the tour was inspired by the USATT's collaboration with the Chinese team in November to continue the legacy of Ping Pong Diplomacy.

USATT CEO Virginia Sung said the tour will include stops in New York, San Francisco and Chicago.

About 20 teams are competing in the tour, including USATT members Nikhil Kumar and Lily Zhang, who holds five US National Championship titles. She represented Team USA at three Olympics and became the first US World Championship medalist in 62 years when she won the bronze with Chinese teammate Lin Gaoyuan at the 2021 World Table Tennis Championships in Houston in November.

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Connie Sweeris, her husband Dell Sweeris and Jan Berris, who were involved in the 1971 and 1972 Ping Pong Diplomacy events, attended the championship awards ceremony on Sunday night.

Connie Sweeris was a member of the US table tennis team invited to visit China in 1971. Dell Sweeris was involved in the reciprocal visit of the Chinese team to the US in 1972 and played with Chinese player Liang Geliang in front of 10,000 people in Michigan.

"It was a thrill to be part of the 1971 Ping Pong Diplomacy because that was a real surprise to us and it made history. Knowing that the experience helped to thaw the relationship, the big thing is, 50 years later we would like to see that friendship legacy move forward," Connie Sweeris said.

Berris, vice-president of the National Committee on United States-China Relations, was involved in organizing the Chinese ping pong team tour in the US in 1972. She recounted that experience to highlight how genuine friendships were formed during the weeks of the tour.

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‘Friendship first’

By the end of the tour, the US players, staff members and security guards all learned how to say "friendship first, competition second" in Chinese. When it was time to say goodbye, some teared up.

"It struck me, during the trip and after, when I would think or talk about it, how surprisingly easy it was to move from a period when people in two countries who had been conditioned by their government and media, to think of the other as enemies, to overcoming that and changing the negative stereotypes that our two countries had of one another," Berris said.

USATT Hall of Fame recipient Scott Preiss brought the event to an end by inviting VIP guests and members of the audience to play table tennis with him.