says
Spin and more spin.
says
Spin and more spin.
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Here, this video is a multiball match simulation drill (a random drill). Notice how before each shot he resets and adjusts his feet a tiny bit, but how he is really moving very little. Even when he gets moved from the deep BH side to the deep FH side, the movement is very little. And ZJK is not as tall as either NextLevel or you, Liten.
The kind of drills that are more commonly thought of as footwork drills where you move around the table and it looks like there is a lot of movement, real play doesn't happen that way. Those are really for making it so that, when you are pressured and ball placement is random like in a match, your feet make the right movements so that you are in the right place to take the ball from the power zone of your stroke. In a real match, footwork doesn't usually happen how it does in a drill like the Falkenberg. Even though practicing drills like that helps with the fundamentals of how you move your feet when you play.
That is just like the counter-hitting that pros do at the beginning of a match or looping at someone who is blocking for you. That stuff doesn't really happen in a match but practicing it does help you with the fundamentals of the stroke. Adding a slight bit of randomness to drills like that, like the randomness of a player who can't really put the ball in the same place twice for either of those drills actually makes them more useful though. If your training partner is too good at putting the ball in the same place, then you will not have to adjust to the placement for each ball which is worth being forced to do. Even if it is little adjustments.
The kind of drills that are more commonly thought of as footwork drills where you move around the table and it looks like there is a lot of movement, real play doesn't happen that way. Those are really for making it so that, when you are pressured and ball placement is random like in a match, your feet make the right movements so that you are in the right place to take the ball from the power zone of your stroke. In a real match, footwork doesn't usually happen how it does in a drill like the Falkenberg. Even though practicing drills like that helps with the fundamentals of how you move your feet when you play.
That is just like the counter-hitting that pros do at the beginning of a match or looping at someone who is blocking for you. That stuff doesn't really happen in a match but practicing it does help you with the fundamentals of the stroke. Adding a slight bit of randomness to drills like that, like the randomness of a player who can't really put the ball in the same place twice for either of those drills actually makes them more useful though. If your training partner is too good at putting the ball in the same place, then you will not have to adjust to the placement for each ball which is worth being forced to do. Even if it is little adjustments.
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