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Thelma Thall

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Nationality
  
United States UK

Name
  
Thelma Thall


Height
  
1.68 m

Weight
  
70 kg

Thelma Thall FileThelma Thall Tybie Sommer standing next to The Thall Sisters

Full name
  
Thelma Thall "Tybie" Sommer

Thelma Thall “Tybie” Sommer (born 1924 in Columbus, Ohio) is the only living American woman to have won two World Table Tennis Championships.

Contents

Thelma Thall FileThelma Thall Tybie Sommer Forehand Slicejpg Wikimedia Commons

She received the Lifetime Achievement Award and is in the Table Tennis Hall of Fame. Tybie reports that she excelled "because of her natural athleticism and her ability to analyze and remain objective."

Early career

Thelma was born in 1924 in Columbus, Ohio. A tomboy as a little girl, she played lots of football and softball. When she was 13, she won a tennis racket in a Bingo game. Never having had any lessons, and yet seeing the similarities with softball, she represented Livingston Park and won the City Junior Tennis Championship. At the age of 15, she was the Captain of the Varsity Boys' Tennis Team at East High School, the only girl ever to play on the boys' team, let alone be Captain. She graduated 1st in a class of 550 students.

1940s achievements

In 1947, Thelma "Tybie" Thall won her first U.S. Open Women’s Doubles Championship with her sister Leah. They also won the Canadian Nationals that year.

In 1948, Thelma and Richard Miles were the first Americans to win the World’s Mixed Doubles Title, in Wembley, London, England.

In 1949, Thelma, as a member of the USA Team, won her Singles and Doubles to win the Corbillon Cup, a World Championship Event, in Stockholm, Sweden. That year, Thall and Miles won the English Open Mixed Doubles and Thelma, with Peggy McLean, won the English Open Women’s Doubles.

Thelma and her sister Leah won 3 U.S. National Women’s Doubles, in 1947, 1948 and 1949. The Thall Sisters also won the Canadian National Doubles in 1947 and 1948.

Later years

Thelma "Tybie" Thall Sommer was inducted into the United States Table Tennis Association Hall of Fame in 1980.

Married with children, Tybie won several Singles Tennis titles in the Northeastern United States. In 1962, she was on the founding board that created the North Shore Women’s Tennis League on Long Island, NY. In 2003, she was honored by that league at the Babe Zaharias Luncheon in N.Y., for creating the flourishing league, which now has over 2,000 participants. Tybie won Mother/Daughter Tennis Titles in the state of Arizona, as well as the city of Phoenix, with daughter Marilyn, now a USPTA Tennis Pro.

In 2005, Thelma "Tybie" Thall Sommer and Leah Thall Neuberger received the USA Table Tennis Mark Mathews Lifetime Achievement Award.

In 2012, Tybie was honored to present "The Thall Sisters Cup,” a newly created trophy to the winner of the Women’s Singles in the U.S. Open Table Tennis Championships. This perpetual trophy lists the winners from 1933 to the present (sister Leah won the US Open 9 times and the World's once; Thelma won the World's twice); while the winner each year gets a small replica, the original sits at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, CO.

Tybie won the first of many Gold Medals in 1987, the inaugural year of The National Senior Olympics. She continues to compete and win Gold Medals having attended and won the Arizona Senior Olympics, Rocky Mountain Senior Games, the Huntsman Games in Utah, and the National Senior Games with Marilyn.

References

Thelma Thall Wikipedia