Full-time Professional Table Tennis Clubs in the USA

To me, a full-time center (roughly speaking) has a website, at least five or more tables, is open at least six days a week, has professional coaches (preferably at least one full-time), a junior program, and a league. If it's missing one of these but has the others, it might make the cut. For example, if a club is only open five days a week, but has fifty tables and ten professional coaches, leagues, junior programs, etc., that's a full-time professional club in my mind. (NOTE - Until the pandemic is over, I won't be taking clubs off the list.)
-Larry Hodges

Current Count: 105 in 24 states and DC
Last update: April 27, 2021
Updates: If you know of a club that should be on the list, email me!

Table Tennis & More, Phoenix, AZ

Alameda Table Tennis Club, Alameda, CA
Triple 8 TTC, Burlingame, CA
Allen & Sons Table Tennis Club, Canoga Park, CA
e4Hats Table Tennis Club, Fullerton, CA
Fremont Table Tennis Academy, Fremont, CA
Fremont Table Tennis Academy - Tri-Valley Branch, San Ramon, CA
California Table Tennis, El Monte, CA
Gilbert Table Tennis Center, Los Angeles, CA
Golden State Table Tennis Club, Milpitas, CA
Grace Lin Table Tennis Center, El Monte, CA
ICC Table Tennis, Milpitas, CA
iTableTennis Albany, Albany, CA
Learning Tree TTC, San Diego, CA
Los Angeles Table Tennis Association, El Monte, CA
North Bay Table Tennis Club, Petaluma, CA
123 Ping Pong, San Jose, CA
Pleasanton Table Tennis Center, Pleasanton, CA
PongNation, Brentwood, CA
Pong Planet, San Carlos, CA
Power Pong, Huntington Beach, CA
San Diego Table Tennis Association, San Diego, CA
Silicon Valley Table Tennis Club, Milpitas, CA
Spin San Francisco, San Francisco, CA
Spin Seattle, Seattle, CA
Swan Warriors Table Tennis Center, Sunnyvale, CA
Sung Hwan Bae Table Tennis Club, Santa Ana, CA
Table Tennis America, Fremont, CA
Topspin Table Tennis/World Champions Table Tennis Academy, San Jose, CA
USA Valley Table Tennis Club, Reseda, CA
Westminster Table Tennis Club, Westminster, CA
Zaman Table Tennis Club, Westminster, CA

Denver Table Tennis Alliance, Denver, CO

Spin DC, Washington, DC
Washington DC Table Tennis Center, Washington DC

Broward Table Tennis Club, Dania Beach, FL
Palm Beach Table Tennis Club, Boynton Beach, FL
PowerStroke Table Tennis Club, Saint Augustine, FL
Vero Beach Table Tennis Club, Vero Beach, FL

Atlanta Table Tennis Academy, Atlanta, GA
Atlanta Table Tennis Center, Atlanta, GA

Aloha TTA, Honolulu, HI

Chicago Slam Table Tennis Club, Chicago, IL
Edge Table Tennis, Arlington Heights, IL
Experior Table Tennis Club, Chicago, IL
Spin Chicago, Chicago, IL

South Bend Table Tennis Center, South Bend, IN
SpinBlock Table Tennis Center, Indianapolis, IN

Howard County Table Tennis Center, Ellicott City, MD
Maryland Table Tennis Center, Gaithersburg, MD
Smart Spin Table Tennis, Adelphi, MD

Boston Table Tennis Academy, Boston, MA
Boston Table Tennis Center, Medford, MA
Massachusetts Table Tennis and Badminton Club, Waltham, MA
Zing! Table Tennis, Easthampton, MA

Farmington Hills Table Tennis Club, Farmington Hills, MI

Table Tennis Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN

Charlotte Table Tennis Club, Charlotte, NC
Impact Table Tennis Club, Apex, NC
Triangle Table Tennis, Morrisville, NC

Las Vegas Table Tennis Club, Las Vegas, NV
Lee's Table Tennis Club, Las Vegas, NV
Nevada Table Tennis Association, Las Vegas, NV

ITTA NJ, Whippany, NJ
Lily Yip Table Tennis Center, Dunellen, NJ
Match Point Table Tennis Center, Whippany, NJ
New Jersey Table Tennis Club, Westfield, NJ
Princeton Pong, Princeton Junction, NJ
Topspin Table Tennis Club, Bridgewater, NJ

Dynamo Table Tennis Club, Brooklyn, NY
Flushing Table Tennis Center, Flushing, NY
Long Island Sport Center, Roslyn, NY
New York Indoor Sports Club, College Point, NY
New York City Table Tennis Academy, New York City, NY
New York International Table Tennis Center, Flushing, NY
New York Table Tennis, Flushing, NY
Port Washington Table Tennis Club, Port Washington, NY
Spin New York 23, New York, NY
Spin New York 54, New York, NY
Wang Chen Table Tennis Club, New York, NY
Westchester Table Tennis Center, Pleasantville, NY

Columbus Table Tennis Club, Columbus, OH
Samson Dubina Table Tennis Academy, Akron, OH
Spin & Smash Table Tennis Club, Columbus, OH
Twinsburg Table Tennis Club, Twinsburg, OH

Blitz Pong, Portland, OR
Paddle Palace Table Tennis Club, Tigard, OR
Portland Table Tennis Club, Portland, OR
Willamette Table Tennis Club, Salem, OR

Spin Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA
The Table Tennis Centre, Mercersburg, PA
Trolley Car Table Tennis Club, Philadelphia, PA

Rhode Island Table Tennis Club, Manville, RI

Austin Table Tennis Association, Austin, TX
Dallas Table Tennis Club, Dallas, TX
Houston Table Tennis Association, Houston, TX
Houston International Table Tennis Academy, Houston, TX
San Antonio Table Tennis Club, San Antonio, TX
https://wearespin.com/location/austin/Spin Austin, Austin, TX
Texas Table Tennis Training Center, Houston, TX

Utah Table Tennis Training & Event Center, Salt Lake City, UT

Northern Virginia Table Tennis Center, Chantilly, VA
SmashTT, Sterling, VA

Seattle Pacific Table Tennis Club, Bellevue, WA

Spin Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI

August 3, 2011

Perfecting your serve

Samson Dubina (2009 USA Nationals Men's Singles Finalist and full-time coach) explains how to perfect your serve, breaking it down point by point. I've always said serve and receive are the most under-developed parts of the game for most players. And serves are the easiest part to develop since you can practice them alone. To quote Nike, just do it!

Here are some articles I've written on serving:

Here are some videos on serving:

August 2, 2011

Celebrities Playing Table Tennis

Yes, it's that time of month again - the Celebrities Playing Table Tennis site gets updated around the first of each month. There are now 1234 pictures of 720 different celebrities playing table tennis - and any short listing of the Who's Who of Celebrities Playing Table Tennis just wouldn't do it justice! There are sections on Politicians/Leaders; Actors and Actresses; Athletes; Musicians; Talk Show Hosts; Writers; Cartoon Characters; and many more!

New celebrities playing table tennis pictures this month include actors Tom Hanks, Haley Joel Osment, Justin Timberlake, Sam Rockwell, Claudette Colbert, Esther Williams, Broderick Crawford; Prince Akihito of Japan (now Emperor); Ed Lee, Mayor of San Francisco; John Prescott, former Deputy Prime Minister of England; Ed Nixon, brother of Richard M. Nixon; golfer Tiger Woods; tennis players Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs; Chinese Olympic Gold Medalist Hurdler Liu Xiang; pool star Mika Immoren; talk show host Regis Philbin; singers Lil Jon and Anne-Marie Godart; English socialite Lady Norah Docker; and cartoon character Donald Duck.

Short sidespin serve to the forehand

Can you serve a short sidespin serve to the forehand that breaks away from a right-hander? A LOT of players have great difficulty with this serve, and many can't return it except crosscourt, i.e. into a right-handed server's forehand. If you play one of these players and can't do this, you are handicapping yourself. Shouldn't you be ready to throw this serve at these people? Three common ways of doing this serve: the forehand tomahawk serve (i.e. racket tip up); reverse forehand pendulum serve; and the regular backhand serve. (This may be expanded into a Tip of the Week.)

New USATT logo

August 1, 2011

Tip of the Week: Jerky Strokes and Jerkyitis

Yes, you can cure that terrible disease that plagues table tennis - Jerkyitis. Here's how.

Comments on this Blog

While there are a lot of readers on this blog - we're averaging well over 300 per day - there are few comments. Feel free to express yourself! It doesn't have to be Q&A, where readers grill me over what I wrote. Feel free to comment with your own experiences, suggestions, dumb puns or jokes, etc.

Funny table tennis terms

Table tennis has some funny terms. Here are three examples:

  • Heavy no-spin - a serve where you use an exaggerated motion to make it look like there's spin but instead serve no-spin.
  • Fishing - if you don't know what this is, it's explained here.
  • Inside-out off-the-bounce sidespin forehand counterloop - say that fast five times.

What are your own favorite table tennis terms, either real or made up?

Americans in China

A lot of USA juniors are training in China this summer, and it's getting lonely at the club without the pitter-patter of their feet as they race around ripping winners past me. Six top juniors from the Maryland Table Tennis Center (my club) are in China training this summer - Tong Gong, Linan Liu, Pamela Song, George & Derek Nie, and Crystal Wang. Others, like John & Nathan Hsu, stayed home, and are training daily with Cheng Yinghua, Jack Huang, Jeffrey Zeng Xun, Sun Ting, and others.

Table tennis movie

July 29, 2011

Sometimes play into an opponent's strength

Something that needs re-emphasis - if something your opponent does give you trouble (other than serves), play into it until you are comfortable with it. Then, just when the opponent has gotten comfortable doing this thing, avoid it like the plague. He'll still probably get to use it, but now you'll be comfortable against it, and he'll have to adjust his whole game in mid-match to find ways to use it. How many times have you come off a table with a loss still feeling uncomfortable against whatever it was your opponent was doing and feeling like you have no answer for it? That should never happen in any match that is remotely competitive.

A classic example is playing someone with short pips on the backhand. If you have trouble with the short pips, play into it until you are comfortable.

Why you choke

July 28, 2011

Fixing the backhand

I had an interesting coaching experience yesterday with a new ten-year-old student. He'd picked up the forehand pretty well, but was struggling on the backhand. Over and over he'd stick his elbow way out to the side and drop the racket tip during the forward swing, contacting the ball with an awkward downward backspin swat, and follow through with his arm extended completely forward, as if he were lunging for something. Over and over I went through the stroke with him, but nothing worked. I told him to keep the racket tip up, keep the elbow in, hit the ball with a slight upward swing with topspin, and not to follow-through with his arm lunging forward. The problem was that all these were symptoms of the one actual problem. I suddenly realized he was contacting the ball too far out in front. When I told him to take the ball closer to his body, in one swoop all the problems disappeared - instant good technique as frustration on both sides of the net changed to sheer glee. Within minutes we were smacking backhands back and forth like pros.

A National Table Tennis League?

July 27, 2011

Your "Go To" serves?

What are your "go to" serves, the serves you use whenever possible both to build up a lead and to win key points? These could be set-up serves that set you up to attack or to get into your favorite type of rally, or they could be trick serves designed to win the point outright or set up an easy winner. I have zillions of serve variations, but here are some of my major "go to" serves. Most of my serves are forehand pendulum serves, but I use different motions to fool opponents.

Set-up Serves

July 26, 2011

Table tennis equipment reviews

I have a new student who is interested in table tennis robots. While I'm familiar with them and have hit with most of the major brands, I'm no expert. I told the student I'd investigate them and see what the best values were - he was hoping for one under $1000, and I was hoping for one that could alternate hitting the ball in at least two places (i.e. one to forehand, one to backhand) so he could do a side-to-side footwork drill on it. And lo and behold, I was referred to Denis' Table Tennis World, which reviews just about all table tennis equipment, including robots. Very useful! If you are interested in equipment reviews, then stop by this site and browse away.

I've browsed the robot reviews, and later today plan to go over them more carefully so I can make a recommendation to the student. (They don't seem to have a review yet for the ipong, the newest but coolest looking low-end model.) No, I'm not going to make my recommendation public; I don't have enough first-hand knowledge of the robots to do that. All I can do is go by what others say.

Two Months Notice to USATT

In exactly two months, it'll be two years since USATT finished its "Strategic Meeting" at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs on Sept. 25-26, 2009. The focus of the meeting was how to increase membership. Everyone agreed our membership (in the 8-9000 range) was a "round-off error." Many slogans were created (*sigh*), and three strategic priorities: Juniors, Grow Membership Through Added Value, and Communications. (I consider the Communications priority pointless unless one of the first two gives USATT something to communicate about.) Three task forces were created for these three priorities.

July 25, 2011

Tip of the Week

In this morning Tip of the Week, I write about the importance of serve variety.

Looping against the block

Almost nobody loops a block into the net; when they miss, it's almost always off the end. Part of this is because they are attacking the ball, and so driving it deep on the table, and simply drive it too deep on the table. Part of it is because they drop their back shoulder, lifting the ball as if it were a backspin. (I wrote a short article about the proper use of the back shoulder for smashing and looping.)

Since most players learn to loop first against backspin, when they start looping against a block (or an incoming topspin), they tend to drop that back shoulder too much. While dropping a little is okay if you are away from the table - key word is "little" - most do it way too much. Instead, you want to keep the back shoulder mostly up, and loop almost the top of the ball. It helps to hook the ball a little as well, dropping the tip down so it contacts the ball on the far side.

And yet players often have trouble doing this, especially right after looping a backspin. And since a disproportionate number of rallies start with a player looping against a backspin, invariably players find themselves looping a backspin and then a block consecutively.

The standard way to practice for this is with multiball. For example, the coach would feed a backspin ball to the middle backhand, and player forehand loops; then the coach feeds a topspin ball to the wide forehand, and again the player loops. And this is great if the player can afford a coach to do this endlessly until they have it down, and then still more to keep it tuned up.

July 22, 2011

Topspinny backhands (Topspinny ®2011 by Larry Hodges)

Yes, I'm trademarking the term "topspinny." Any time you say it, you have to pay me a quarter. (To the humor-challenged: I'm joking.) I like to use the term to describe players who use a lot of topspin on their backhands, as opposed to others who hit flatter, such as myself. Flat backhands used to be the norm, but these up-and-coming junior players are mostly taught topspinny backhands, sort of half drive, half loop, right off the bounce. I can demonstrate the shot easily, but I don't naturally use it in a match, not after 35 years of hitting "normal" backhands. The shot is highly effective; the ball just jumps at you like a normal backhand loop, with all the quickness of an off-the-bounce flat backhand.

Adjustable height device

On Wednesday, I blogged about new training tools, including a serving height device made by local player and coach John Olsen, with adjustable brackets that hold a pole over the net. We've used it as an exercise both for serving and stroking low to the net. Here are two pictures, set high and set low.

100 degrees

That's how hot it got yesterday here in Maryland, and it's supposed to get a touch hotter today. Aren't we glad table tennis is an indoor sport, and that the Maryland Table Tennis Center bought a new $8000 air conditioning system a month ago? For the last twenty years our air conditioning left something to be desired, but now it's nice and cool inside. Then you step outside and it's like walking into a furnace.

When humidity strikes