Man who beat Andy Murray playing in Pyongyang Open as North Korea hopes to attract more athletes to country

Country has held on to ITTF tournament, currently underway, and wants to organise more tournaments in aftermath of Trump-Kim summit

In a photo taken on June 17, 2018 a table tennis player from North Korea serves during a match of the Pyongyang Open annual International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) match in Pyongyang. North Korean sports administrators are hoping the country will come in from the sporting cold in the wake of leader Kim Jong Un's summit with Donald Trump in Singapore.
 / AFP / Ed JONES
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North Korean sports administrators are hoping the country will come in from the sporting cold in the wake of leader Kim Jong-un's summit with Donald Trump in Singapore.

Isolated and subject to UN Security Council sanctions over its banned nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programmes, North Korea does not often host international sporting events.

A Women's Asian Cup qualifying group last year – when North played South – was the highest-profile event it had held for years.

But as tensions mounted it lost the right to hold the junior world championships for judo and weightlifting, both of which it had been awarded.

Even so it has held on to an annual International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) Challenge-level event, the Pyongyang Open, currently underway.

In this June 12, 2018, file photo, U.S. President Donald Trump makes a statement before saying goodbye to North Korea leader Kim Jong Un after their meetings at the Capella resort on Sentosa Island in Singapore. Trump focused his recent summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on eliminating the regime’s nuclear weapons. But experts say he missed an opportunity to press North Korea on another pressing threat: its long record of dangerous cyberattacks against commercial and military targets in the U.S. and allied nations. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh,Pool)
It is yet to be seen whether the Kim-Trump summit in Singapore will have any bearing on sports in North Korea. Susan Walsh / AP Photo

In the wake of the Singapore summit, when Kim and Trump shook hands in front of the cameras, tournament director Kim Chong Il said he hoped his country would now be able to host more international sporting occasions.

The North was capable of hosting, he said, adding that previously "the limitations were not set by our side".

Table tennis has had a diplomatic role in the past – matches between China and the US helped break the ice ahead of Richard Nixon's historic visit to Beijing in 1972 which led years later to Washington's recognition of the People's Republic.

And at the world championships in Sweden last month North and South Korea unified their teams rather than play against each other in the quarter-finals.

"For us it's very important that table tennis is for all and that we can play table tennis all over the world," ITTF finance vice president Petra Sorling told AFP in Pyongyang.

"For us this is very important. If instead of closing the door we can open the door we would love to be part of that."

LONDON, ENGLAND - JUNE 16: Andy Murray of Great Britain speaks during a press conference during qualifying day 1 of the Fever-Tree Championships at Queens Club on June 16, 2018 in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by Patrik Lundin/Getty Images for LTA)
Andy Murray is the most famous tennis player from Scotland, but before him there was Gavin Rumgay who eventually took up pig pong. Patrik Lundin / Getty Images

Before Andy Murray, there was Gavin Rumgay

A total of 23 foreign players took part in the Pyongyang Open, mostly from China and Vietnam, but also including Scotland No 1 Gavin Rumgay.

At the age of 16 Rumgay was also Scotland's No 1 tennis player, and beat future Wimbledon champion Andy Murray five times before deciding to concentrate on the smaller game.

The 33-year-old player is now ranked 150 in the world and was the No 1 seed, but lost to a local player in his very first match.

As North Koreans do not play in overseas tournaments, he explained, they do not accumulate ranking points but their lowly figures belie their skills.

"I play obviously a lot more tournaments than they do, I have got a much better world ranking than them but level-wise the top four or five will be better than me," he said.

Rumgay runs a racket sports business to support himself and said he can only train around 10 hours a week.

"These guys are training two three-hour sessions a day, 30 hours a week, which is exactly what you need to play at the level these guys are playing."