This user has no status.
This user has no status.
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Well-Known Member
Thanks - I did use my club practice session last night to work on this and take what flowed in shadow practice into hitting balls. On balance I was very pleased - as long as I focused on dropping that right knee and turning the hips then it seemed to naturally drive a less shoulder dominant (and more forearm/wrist driven) stroke - I got more spin and better consistency when I timed it right. I was probably taking the ball a little later as you point out, despite trying to hit at top of bounce.You can practice them separately, I did that to start. Just get your legs and hips to rotate the right way first, then add the upper body when you're used to it.
I'm about to start my FH focused training. I've been doing about 60% BH, 25% FH, 10% service, and 5% short game. Later this week I'll flip the FH/BH ratio and keep everything else the same. Even with a reduced FH workload I've been able to make quite a bit of progress in correcting my FH form. I'm not looking for perfection, just something more stable.
On that topic, I've found that I've been using my legs wrong. From the get go I trained the forward leaning loop, where my right leg kicks forward and lands a few inches in front of where it started at the end of a loop. That's fine against a floaty ball, and it's particularly useful when there's suddenly a short return when I'm away from the table. However, against faster balls I can't get to the ball fast enough and my recovery is slow. One of the issue is that to execute this shot, the ball needs to be somewhat in front of me, like ~45 degrees to my right, and when the ball is coming fast I can't get to it that quickly.
With the new motion I've found out two things. One is that it's optimal to take the ball later, ~15 degrees in front of you, or the right to left motion will loop the ball way off the left side of the table. This allows me the time to get to faster balls much more comfortably.
The second thing is that my legs are actually more for positioning and stability rather than power directly. First, they positions the rest of my body along all 3 axes (very important to adjust height for the vertical axis!) so I can get thr most comfortable shot. This is particularly important for the BH where the hit box is smaller. You see pros even jumping in the air sometimes to hit a BH loop.
The second thing is that it acts as an anchor for the rest of the body to generate power. During the backswing when the entire body leans right, the right leg maintains stability. When weight transfers to the left during the forward swing, the left leg assumes a prominent role. Only when doing the forward leaning shot or a brush loop do the legs actually provide a lot of power.