ENSIKLOPEDIA Cari Tekan Enter untuk memulai pencarian cepat. Kembali ke Ensiklopedia Arsip Wikipedia Indonesia 2009 European Table Tennis Championships 2009 European Table Tennis ChampionshipsTennis tournament2009 European Table Tennis ChampionshipsDate13 – 20 SepLocationStuttgart, GermanyVenuePorsche-Arena ← 2008 · European Table Tennis Championships · 2010 → The 2009 European Table Tennis Championships was held in Stuttgart, Germany from 13–20 October 2009. Venue for the competition was Porsche-Arena. Medal summary Men's events Event Gold Silver Bronze Team[1] GermanyTimo BollDimitrij OvtcharovChristian Süß DenmarkMichael MazeFinn TugwellMartin Monrad RomaniaAdrian CrișanAndrei FilimonConstantin Cioti AustriaChen WeixingWerner SchlagerRobert Gardos Singles[2] Michael Maze (DEN) Werner Schlager (AUT) Timo Boll (GER) Fedor Kuzmin (RUS) Doubles[3] Timo Boll (GER) Christian Süß (GER) Wang Zengyi (POL) Lucjan Blaszczyk (POL) Bojan Tokič (SLO) Aleksandar Karakašević (SRB) Emmanuel Lebesson (FRA) Damien Éloi (FRA) Women's events Event Gold Silver Bronze Team[4] NetherlandsLi JiaoLi JieElena Timina PolandLi QianXu JieNatalia Partyka Czech RepublicIveta VacenovskáDana HadačováRenáta Štrbíková CroatiaTamara BorošAndrea BakulaCornelia Vaida Singles[5] Wu Jiaduo (GER) Margaryta Pesotska (UKR) Viktoria Pavlovich (BLR) Rūta Paškauskienė (LIT) Doubles[6] Daniela Dodean (ROU) Elizabeta Samara (ROU) Wenling Tan Monfardini (ITA) Nikoleta Stefanova (ITA) Rūta Paškauskienė (LIT) Oksana Fadeyeva (RUS) Zhenqi Barthel (GER) Kristin Silbereisen (GER) References ↑ Men's Team Results Archived 2013-10-10 at the Wayback Machine ↑ Men's Singles Results Archived 2013-10-10 at the Wayback Machine ↑ Men's Doubles Results Archived 2013-10-10 at the Wayback Machine ↑ Women's Team Results Archived 2013-10-10 at the Wayback Machine ↑ Women's Singles Results Archived 2013-10-10 at the Wayback Machine ↑ Women's Doubles Results Archived 2013-10-10 at the Wayback Machine vteEuropean Table Tennis ChampionshipsEditions Budapest 1958 Zagreb 1960 Berlin 1962 Malmö 1964 London 1966 Lyon 1968 Moscow 1970 Rotterdam 1972 Novi Sad 1974 Prague 1976 Duisburg 1978 Bern 1980 Budapest 1982 Moscow 1984 Prague 1986 Paris 1988 Gothenburg 1990 Stuttgart 1992 Birmingham 1994 Bratislava 1996 Eindhoven 1998 Bremen 2000 Zagreb 2002 Courmayeur 2003 Aarhus 2005 Belgrade 2007 Saint Petersburg 2008 Stuttgart 2009 Ostrava 2010 Gdańsk–Sopot 2011 Herning 2012 Schwechat 2013 Lisbon 2014 Yekaterinburg 2015 Budapest 2016 Luxembourg 2017 Alicante 2018 Nantes 2019 Warsaw 2020 Cluj-Napoca 2021 Munich 2022 Malmö 2023 Linz 2024 Zadar 2025 Mixed doubles Subotica 2009 Subotica 2010 Istanbul 2011 Buzău 2012 Buzău 2013 List of medalists