European Under-21 Table Tennis Championships

The European Under-21 Championships is an annual table tennis tournament organised under the authority of the European Table Tennis Union (ETTU).[1] The introduction of the event to the table tennis calendar was approved at the ETTU Congress in 2015, with the first competition held in Sochi, Russia, in February 2017.[2]

European Under-21 Championships
Tournament information
SportTable tennis
Established2017
AdministratorEuropean Table Tennis Union
Tournament
format(s)
Singles: Groups/Knockout
Doubles: Knockout
Participants56 men; 56 women

Editions

Edition Year Host City Country Events
12017Sochi Russia4
22018Minsk Belarus4
32019Gondomar Portugal4
42020Varaždin Croatia5
52021Spa Belgium5
62022Cluj-Napoca Romania5
72023Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina5

Champions

Year Location Men's singles Women's singles Men's doubles Women's doubles Mixed doubles Ref.
2017 Russia Sochi Croatia Tomislav Pucar Germany Chantal Mantz Denmark Anders Lind
Slovakia Alexander Valuch
Belgium Eline Loyen
Belgium Lisa Lung
not held [3][4]
2018 Belarus Minsk Czech Republic Tomáš Polanský Russia Mariia Tailakova Turkey Ibrahim Gündüz
Turkey Abdullah Yigenler
Poland Natalia Bajor
Ukraine Solomiya Brateyko
not held [5][6]
2019 Portugal Gondomar Greece Ioannis Sgouropoulos Romania Adina Diaconu Slovenia Darko Jorgić
Slovenia Peter Hribar
England Tin-Tin Ho
Austria Karoline Mischek
not held [7]
2020 Croatia Varaždin Russia Vladimir Sidorenko France Prithika Pavade Romania Cristian Pletea
Romania Rareş Şipoş
France Leili Mostafavi
France Nolwenn Fort
Romania Cristian Pletea
Romania Adina Diaconu
[8]
2021 Belgium Spa Greece Ioannis Sgouropoulos Germany Annett Kaufmann Belgium Adrien Rassenfosse
Belgium Olav Kosolosky
Turkey Özge Yılmaz
Turkey Ece Haraç
Romania Rareş Şipoş
Romania Andreea Dragoman
[9]
2022 Romania Cluj-Napoca Poland Samuel Kulczycki Romania Elena Zaharia Croatia Ivor Ban
Hungary Csaba András
Turkey Ece Haraç
Turkey Özge Yılmaz
Romania Andrei Istrate
Romania Luciana Mitrofan
[10]
2023 Bosnia and Herzegovina Sarajevo Poland Miłosz Redzimski Croatia Hana Arapović France Hugo Deschamps
France Thibault Poret
Germany Mia Griesel
Romania Bianca Mei-Roșu
Poland Samuel Kulczycki
Poland Zuzanna Wielgos
[11]

All time medal table

See also

References

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