LEAGOLOGY
Racket Sports

Table Tennis

Reflexes and spin at ten feet. Table tennis looks gentle until someone serves with backspin and the ball dies on your side of the net. The table's small. The reactions aren't.

Run a tournament Free. No card needed. Two minutes.

what you get

Everything you need to run
Table Tennis.

Pick a format. Set the date. Share the link. We handle brackets, scoring, scheduling, and results. Your players just show up and compete.

how you win

First to win 2 games takes the match. Finals go longer.

matches

1 vs 1. You and whoever the draw gives you.

scoring

Tap in the result. Brackets do the rest.

clock

None. It's done when someone wins.

formats

Knockout — one session · League — longer, everyone plays everyone · Groups + knockout — groups then knockout

tournament formats

Pick a format.
We handle the rest.

Not sure? Most people start with knockout.

one night

knockout.

8–16 players. Single elimination. Lose and you're out. Win and you're through. Done in one session.

single elimination · one session
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over weeks

league.

Everyone plays everyone. Points table. Standings updated after every match. The format that keeps players coming back.

round robin · standings
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the full thing

groups into knockout.

Groups of 4, top players advance. Then knockout rounds to the final. The format for bigger events.

groups + bracket · 16–32 players
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FAQ

Common questions.

How long does a table tennis tournament take?

A 16-player knockout takes about 5 hours on one table. Shorter matches or more tables speed it up.

What's the best format for a table tennis tournament?

Knockout is the most common — quick, dramatic, done in one session. For something longer, try groups into knockout.

How many players do I need?

Sweet spot is 8–16 for a knockout. Send them the link. They sort themselves out.

Is it free to set up?

Knockout and league tournaments are free. Always. Advanced formats like groups into knockout are on the starter plan.