The 1967 World Table Tennis Championships were held at the Johanneshovs Isstadion in Stockholm from April 11 to April 21, 1967.

During the Cultural Revolution, Chinese sports professionals were denounced as 'Sprouts of Revisionism' and were denied places at the 1967 World Table Tennis Championships and 1969 World Table Tennis Championships. Players such as Jung Kuo-tuan were persecuted and he committed suicide in 1968. Had China competed in those championships and not lost the impetus gained in the previous decade they would surely have continued to dominate the World Championships.

Medalists

Team

EventGoldSilverBronze
Swaythling Cup Men's TeamJapan Nobuhiko Hasegawa Hajime Kagimoto Satoru Kawahara Koji Kimura Mitsuru KonoNorth Korea Jung Ryang-Woong Kang Neung-Hwa Kim Chang-Ho Kim Jung-Sam Pak Sin IlSweden Hans Alsér Carl-Johan Bernhardt Christer Johansson Kjell Johansson Bo Persson
Corbillon Cup Women's teamJapan Naoko Fukatsu Saeko Hirota Sachiko Morisawa Noriko YamanakaSoviet Union Laima Balaišytė Svetlana Grinberg Signe Paisjärv Zoja RudnovaHungary Erzsebet Jurik Beatrix Kisházi Éva Kóczián Sarolta Lukacs

Individual

EventGoldSilverBronze
Men's singlesJapan Nobuhiko HasegawaJapan Mitsuru KonoWest Germany Eberhard Schöler
Japan Koji Kimura
Women's singlesJapan Sachiko MorisawaJapan Naoko FukazuJapan Noriko Yamanaka
Soviet Union Zoja Rudnova
Men's doublesSweden Hans Alsér Sweden Kjell JohanssonSoviet Union Anatoly Amelin Soviet Union Stanislav GomozkovJapan Nobuhiko Hasegawa Japan Mitsuru Kono
Czechoslovakia Vladimir Miko Czechoslovakia Jaroslav Staněk
Women's doublesJapan Saeko Hirota Japan Sachiko MorisawaJapan Naoko Fukazu Japan Noriko YamanakaSoviet Union Svetlana Grinberg Soviet Union Zoja Rudnova
Hungary Erzsebet Jurik Hungary Éva Kóczián
Mixed doublesJapan Nobuhiko Hasegawa Japan Noriko YamanakaJapan Koji Kimura Japan Naoko FukazuRomania Dorin Giurgiuca Romania Maria Alexandru
Soviet Union Anatoly Amelin Soviet Union Zoja Rudnova

External links