Format recommendation
Best Tournament Format for 14 Table Tennis Players
With 14 players in a table tennis tournament, **Pool Play with Playoffs** is the format experienced organisers reach for almost every time. Pool play is the workhorse format for medium-sized tournaments. With 14 players you'd split into 4 pools, run a round robin inside each, then take the top 2 from each pool into a 8-player single-elim playoff. Total: 31 matches. Every player gets a guaranteed 6 pool matches before any knockout.
Time and court budget
Time budget: 31 matches × 20 minutes ÷ 2 courts ≈ 5.5 hours of clock time. Build a 10-minute buffer between rounds and stick to it.
Alternative formats to consider
If round robin doesn't fit your time, fall back to single elimination (13 matches, ~2.5h on 2 courts) — but accept that 7 players will go home after one game.
Pick based on three things: how many courts you have, how much time, and whether fairness matters more than speed for your group.
Run it with the free Pool Play Generator
The Volley Pool Play Generator on the website generates this exact bracket in seconds. Enter your 14 table tennis player names, click generate, print or share. No login required.
For live scoring, brackets that update automatically as results come in, and ELO rating tracking per player, run the whole tournament in the free Volley app on iOS or Android.
Frequently asked questions
How many matches in a 14-player round robin?
91 matches. The formula is N×(N-1)/2, so 14×13/2 = 91.
How many courts do I need for 14 table tennis players?
2 courts is the practical minimum for this size. 1 court doubles the time; 4 courts cuts it in half. The math: total matches × match length ÷ courts = total clock time. Plan around the courts you can actually book.
What's the best app to run a 14-player table tennis tournament?
Volley is purpose-built for it. It generates the bracket, runs matches with proper table tennis scoring, updates standings live, and handles registration and payments. Free on iOS and Android. The free generators on the website are a no-app alternative if you only need printed brackets.