Any modern rubber you use in any thickness near what is common will feel and perform different.<br>
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A play who is close to the table and plays fast without a lot of spin has two categories of equipment that make it easier to do the common two most common tasks (hit hard/fast with little spin and block when needed). |<br><br>Tank you, can you list a couple other rubbers that can achieve this?<br>
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Koreans coaches nearly 100% started out players with this kind of style. They started them out with the most ridiculously fast blades and mid-firm early gen tensor rubbers in max sponge. This setup makes it real easy to pound it without a lot of spin given that the player is in position, commands the strike zone, and has solid drive stroke. (Drive means little topspin... in Korea it means heavy topspin - I am talking about little spin)<br>
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So an OFF++ blade like Schlager Carbon and a mid firm early gen tensor rubber like Yasaka Extend HS or Calibra LT (that one was firmer, but still easy for drives) kind of rubber was very common.<br>
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Another way is the counter hitter at the table vs incoming spin... an ALL class wood blade and soft to medium sponge control rubbers allows a player to more easily hit through a loop and land the ball. You are simply able to hit harder and still land it.<br>
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Rosena could work for this, so can many other rubbers.