I was sitting in a cafe in downtown Toronto when Sun Yingsha’s training video popped up on my Weibo feed. The timestamp showed it was 2 AM back in China, but here I was, drinking my morning coffee while watching our national table tennis stars sweating it out in preparation for the Asian Championships.
There’s something about watching athletes train that hits differently when you’re overseas. Sun Yingsha and Wang Yidi were practicing their backhand shots, their focused expressions reminding me of my college days when I’d stay up late watching table tennis matches with my dorm mates. We’d cheer every point like we were in the stadium ourselves.
I remember one time last year, I tried to watch a major table tennis tournament live, but the stream kept buffering every 30 seconds. There I was, staring at Wang Chuqin’s frozen serve position for what felt like an eternity, while my WeChat group back home was already exploding with reactions to the point he’d just scored.
The caption said the national team’s first match would be on October 12th. That’s 3 AM here in Toronto. I immediately thought – will I be able to watch it live? Or will I wake up to spoilers in my family group chat again?
What struck me most was the normalcy of it all. These world-class athletes, just doing their regular training routines, while I’m sitting halfway across the world feeling this weird mix of pride and distance. The video quality was surprisingly good this time – no pixelated balls or frozen frames. But I’ve had enough bad experiences to know it’s not always this smooth.
My cousin back in Beijing texted me after I shared the video: ‘Remember when we used to imitate their serves in our living room?’ I laughed, because she didn’t know how many times I’d missed crucial moments due to regional restrictions or laggy streams.
The Asian Championships might not be the Olympics, but for us table tennis fans, every match matters. And when you’re overseas, being able to watch these moments without technical issues feels like a small victory against homesickness.
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