Maria Tsaptsinos

...started playing table tennis during the last year of her primary schooling and then joined Kingfisher club whereas she trained with Brian Halliday and later had weekly sessions with Gareth Herbert. Then she was invited to Lilleshall and Sheffield for the Youth Development Squad and consequently to the International Youth Squad. Represented England in various tournaments since 2012 and participated at the Youth Europeans as a Caded and Junior. In 2015 the first call for a senior cap came for the Europeans and Table Tennis Commonwealth.
Maria currently is a scholar at University of Nottingham studying Geography.
Her other interests include football, music and spends time socialising on facebook.


Sponsors: Tees Sport, Spire Dunedin Hospital, SSE with the help of SportsAid, Table Tennis 365, TASS


Wednesday, 19 November 2014

Maria's interview before the Nationals

Maria was the winner of the Junior Nationals last year. Few days before this years competition Maria was asked for her thoughts. The article can be found at the Table Tennis England site
Helshan Weerasinghe and Maria Tsaptsinos are relishing the chance to defend their National Junior Singles titles in Preston at the weekend.
Both players enjoyed their maiden triumphs at this level last season, beating Igor Morais and Tin-Tin Ho in their respective finals.
Tsaptsinos had started the event as second seed behind Ho, and the positions will be the same this time around.
The two are the class acts in the field and it would be no surprise if they once more locked horns in the final.
And, despite being the defending champion, Tsaptsinos believes the pressure is no different to last year and accepts that Ho is still the one to beat.
“I don’t think the pressure is any different,” said the Reading player. I don’t go out thinking ‘I must win’, I just go and do my best.
“At the moment, Tin-Tin is playing well and she’s beaten me the last couple of times we’ve played. But on the day, you never really know – it’s how you play and how you are mentally and physically.
“We train together and I don’t think there’s much difference in our games.”
The pair are now together on the England scene and both recently featured at the Hungarian Youth Open.
Tsaptsinos said international events were now forming a greater focus for the pair – although the Nationals are still high up in the order of priorities.
“Making your mark in England is one thing, and you always like to win those big competitions, there’s no doubt about it,” she said.
“When we were younger, it was the be-all and end-all, but now we’re getting all these chances to go abroad as well.
“Tin-Tin’s getting those international results right now, but I didn’t play at the top of my game in Hungary – maybe it was the pressure and nerves of my first big tournament since the big improvements in my game. But those results will come in time.
“I feel my game has improved tremendously over the last 18 months and people are starting to notice that.”

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