The Ping Pong Club

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The Ping Pong Club
Ping-Pong Club.jpg
Cover of the first tankōbon volume, featuring Maeno (center) and the rest of the members of the ping-pong club
行け!稲中卓球部
(Ike! Inachū Takkyū-bu)
Manga
Written byMinoru Furuya
Published byKodansha
MagazineWeekly Young Magazine
DemographicSeinen
Original run19931996
Volumes13
Anime television series
Directed byMasami Hata
Written bySukehiro Tomita
Music byKatz Hoshi
StudioGrouper Productions
Licensed by
Original networkTBS
Original run 5 April 1995 27 September 1995
Episodes26
Wikipe-tan face.svg Anime and manga portal

The Ping Pong Club (Japanese: 行け!稲中卓球部, Hepburn: Ike! Inachū Takkyū-bu, lit. Go! Inachū Middle School Ping-Pong Club) is a Japanese manga by Minoru Furuya about the members of a middle school ping-pong club. In 1996, the manga won the Kodansha Manga Award for general manga.[1]

It was adapted as an anime television series in 1995. The anime series was released in the U.S. by Central Park Media. Some episodes were first released on VHS in 2001, but it was never fully released on VHS. Later that year it was released completely on DVD in individual volumes, with both an English dub and the original audio track with subtitles. In 2002 was also re-released as a box set.

Characters[]

Maeno
Voiced by: Kōsuke Okano (Japanese); James Carter Cathcart (English; as Jimmy Zoppi)[2]
Somewhat the 'leader' of the Ping Pong Club. He has a strange demeanor and enjoys any conversation or subject involving his glorious 'ass', of which he is very proud. Contrary to the belief that his strange and perverted attitude would repel girls, it actually attracts them (as well as his good friend Izawa).
Hiromi Izawa
Voiced by: Takumi Yamazaki (Japanese); Buddy Woodward (English)[2]
Izawa's strange hairstyle is constantly the 'butt' of many a joke in the series. He is a kind and caring person, although quite perverted at times, and he lives his life by the laws of chivalry. He is a huge boxing fan and wears his shoulder length hair in the style of Joe Yabuki from the popular manga Ashita no Joe. He and Maeno constantly play little games in which Izawa almost always acts as the woman, be it a mother, child, or love interest. His relationship with Maeno can be debated. He is pretty much Maeno's very close friend but he has a very strange adversity to Maeno's getting a girlfriend and he even went so far as to dress up as a woman to repel Maeno's soon-to-be lover. He is also the only one in the show who has freckles.
Takeda
Voiced by: Tsutomu Takayama (Japanese); Crispin Freeman (English; as Mark Percy)[2]
One of ping-pong club's two 'pretty boys'. Takeda has a bowl haircut with short bangs, and he is also the crush of female character Kyōko. He even has a whole episode devoted to him fondling her breasts (in which Maeno, Izawa, and Tanaka are all hiding naked in a locker).
Yūsuke Kinoshita
Voiced by: Susumu Kaseta (Japanese); Wayne Grayson (English; as Hans Brikfeice)
The quintessential "pretty boy" out of the two in the ping-pong club. He, like Izawa, has hair down to his shoulders and is the most popular and cool guy in the whole school, constantly having girls chase after him. In one episode however, Maeno and Izawa dress him like a girl and it's now Tanaka who's chasing after him. In the English dub of the series, Kinoshita is shown as having a slacker 'surfer-boy' accent.
Tanaka
Voiced by: Yasuhiro Takato (Japanese); Gil Goujons (English)
A tiny little pervert coming from a long line of "Panty Masters". Under his clothes, he has a very shapely feminine body that is mistaken for that of a girl's from the back in an episode. He is constantly tricked into playing along with Maeno and Izawa's schemes. He also constantly refers to girls he likes as "Mommy".
Mitchell Gorō Tanabe
Voiced by: Masato Amada (Japanese); Dan Green (English; as Jack Bean)[2]
Half American and half Japanese. Hairy, blond, and blue-eyed, Tanabe is always looking out for people in trouble and for ways to help his good friend, Tanaka. He is gentle and helpful as well as being very sensitive. He is known for his exponential stench and bad B.O. The only thing that has been able to destroy his horrible smell is pool disinfectant.
Kyōko Iwashita
Voiced by: Sakura Uehara (Japanese); Sharon Becker (English; as Cookie D'Goodie)
She's a tough-as-nails, and landed the managerial job because the principal of the school hoped it would be a way to keep her out of trouble. She barely tolerates the antics of the room of adolescent boys trying constantly to get in her panties. In the episode "the Burning Spirit," she proves to have incredible motivational skills for the boys when she offers a "sex pass" to the best player on the team: "The holder of this pass can do anything they want with my body for a month!" The offer powers the below mediocre team into the city finals.
Chiyoko Kamiya
Voiced by: Nanami Kurosaki (Japanese); Kayzie Rogers (English; as Paula Brown)
Shows up in later episodes as a shy girl who has a crush on Kinoshita, and figures if she can improve her ping pong skills, she'll catch his eye. A good plan, but her mistake is going to nerdy freak Izawa to unquestioningly enlist him as her ping pong sensei. Izawa's fondest dream is to have a beautiful girl that obeys his every word, and not abusing his new-found position of power proves to be impossible.

Anime[]

The episodes in The Ping Pong Club are actually split into 12-14 minute segments, combined to form a typical 25 minute single episode. Seeing that there are 26 full episodes, when in fact all are split to a total of 52 episodes released on 5 DVDs.[3]

When localizing the Anime for release in North America, Software Sculptors neglected to follow the 52-Episode numbering, deciding instead not to count the five two-part episodes as two separate episodes. Their official episode count on the DVDs is instead 47. Also, volumes in the series have had name changes when re-released, with Discs 4 and 5 in the series being renamed from "Ping Pong Club - Goes for Broke" and "Ping Pong Club - Assorted Shorts" to " Ping Pong Club - Goes Too Far" and "Ping Pong Club - Rots in Hell".

Episode titles[]

References[]

  1. ^ Joel Hahn. "Kodansha Manga Awards". Comic Book Awards Almanac. Archived from the original on 2007-08-16. Retrieved 2007-08-21.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Ping Pong Club". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved 2019-11-07.
  3. ^ "The Ping Pong Club DVD Collection". Central Park Media. Archived from the original on 24 March 2006.

External links[]

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