says
Spin to win!
says
Spin to win!
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Well-Known Member
Moderator
Excellent!Alright, here's a practice video of me against one of the better players at a club I frequent. He's a lot better than me and I have a ton of issues with his service receives, but he has troubles with my attacks, so the focus of this practice session was me serving and then attacking his receives (we had already done about an hour of very, very basic FH/BH practice beforehand, just the very basic warm-up like drills to work on fundamentals). You can see why I can't yet put anything I've practiced into real game yet. The main issue I can see is slow response time due to a combination of slow recognition, slow decision making, and slow recovery after both service and loops.
On services I need to work on accelerating at the right time. I've been accelerating way too early so contact is way too thin, not creating enough spin. He pointed that out to me and I find that to be very true.
I feel fairly good about my form on both sides now doing single-sided practice, so starting this week I'll try to put everything together with FH/BH combined random location practices. I think this will help with my recovery time. I'll start including a motion to ready position after services to help improve my readiness to respond to the opponent's service return. I'll probably devise more complications to my loop vs underspin drills to include service receives.
Slow decision making is just gonna take some time, I'll make it a point to start applying it into games and eventually I'll get used to responding to certain shots a certain way instead of having to think about it. Slow recognition will need to come from a lot more experience. Against penholders I especially have trouble with it because I feel that with a flick of the wrist they can send shots anywhere with varying spin. Maybe that'll get better too when I feel more comfortable with other aspects of my game.
Personally, I find watching that so much more valuable than seeing you hit balls at a million miles per hour!
A couple of pointers from me.
If you want to improve, you need to hit shots.
There were a huge amount of your serves that he couldn't get back (usually pushing them in the net) - You don't learn anything from this, so I would have changed my serve slightly so he could get them back.
I don't love how much you follow through with your FH - I feel like you'd get very stuck against anyone who could block, as you'd be very out of position.
You don't really want the bat to end up much past your eyeline when you've finished the stroke, but yours is ending up further than your left shoulder most of the time!
Try and bring it back a little - You'll save energy as well!
Also, on the FH, it looks like you are coming around the ball (on the right hand side) a little bit, rather than a true up and down loop.
It's not a massive problem in itself, but it'll stop you from being able to go inside out, or hitting the balls down the line with as much success.
I think if you fix the over rotation, this issue will also get fixed to a degree.
On the backhand, if you are wanting to loop it, you need to relax those wrist a little bit - It's the hardest shot in my opinion (at least, it's the one that people struggle with the most).
As Blahness said, balance is also key here.
Final point..... I don't know how much you play against Humans vs Robots, but I think you should try and play against Humans as much as you can.
There is a big difference between your Robot play and Human play, which I think is just down to experience of playing Humans.
Your game play will increase significantly if you can consistently put what you do in practice with a Robot, into a game with a Human.