I actually just loop to win the point straight away depending on what I think where he is weaker FH or BH. I don´t really think about what anglees I give him or which angles I need to cover after my stroke. I always think he can play anywhere on the table so I am mostly not ready for the next ball to attack properly. Thats why you see me return it weak back.
Thats a good point. I will write it down and try to practise this "actively" more. Maybe I do it sometimes unconsiously but even if I do it placement wise I try to end the rally with a fast paced topspin even though its not even needed.
Like currently I feel like I can only loop 100% or 20% (very slow and highish) I can only do like 50-70% when I have to open up on long backspin. But I feel I dont have the control yet to loop it at that pace against float/block highish balls.
Which is weird because I am more upright and technically it should be easier for me? Generally I play much better topspins against lower blocks or lower long backspin balls. Against higher balls that have some backspin on it my stroke doesnt seem to work reliably because it goes off the table. I seem to not realize that I dont need much upwards movement even though the ball has some backspin on it. And its not even that alone but also that when I try to apply spin on the ball -> I try to hit tangential but still upwards to apply spin and the arc. But that is pure luck since I can´t properly control it yet.
Maybe my frustration also comes from this that technically I can do any stroke but during the heat of the moment I don´t know how to loop that certain ball to make it safe over the net and controlled land it on the table.
Been working on this but in training its easy. The balls come as predicted(placement) and I can loop that certain ball back with no problem. Yesterday I did this drill too but I didn´t get to play the block ball because he would block it out 95% of the time. He could only block my topspin against topspin balls because I don´t have as much spin as against long backspin balls. So it´s a bit hard.
And in actual games they don´t really push it back to my FH as much and I seem to be quite late (to not make it obvious that I am gonna pivot) thats why I have been working on my backhand opening lately but it´s not as good as my FH obviously. I am also getting old so I don´t want to rely on pivoting to win games.
Anyways maybe someone who understood what I wrote here knows how I can work on these things. I could try to film my training drills next week after my game on Monday. Which will be against a really strong opponent RC1700 currently 1st 30-1 in the standings.
Played him twice but last time he played even better.
- Here he just casually loops the ball slowly and controlled.
Should I just get low and slap these slow "topspins" or shovels that he is giving me back? The one loss he has was against a young player who smashes aswell. Even though I didn´t see their games he probably did that to him - he has only 1 playstyle. Seems like I just respected those slow openings by him but it doesn´t look like it has much spin on it
I just watched the match again.
He's good, very controlled and not making many mistakes.
I've played a 1750 German ranking so I know the level.
I would say his game should suit you though. He doesn't push much and likes an attacking topspin game.
If you are relaxed, focused, and play your attacking game with confidence you can do well.
Tactics aside, one of the issues you have is recovering and preparing for the next shot. I think someone else said it earlier but you have somehow to build it into your strokes.
A slightly strange thing I noticed is that when receiving serve, you are low, low, waiting, low and then just as they are about to serve you stand up. I don't know if this is intentional or something you're not aware of but staying down should be better for the recieve.
In the rallies, particularly BH, don't reach towards the ball, wait for it to come to you, you have time, or if you're reaching because it's dropping then you're either not low enough or not close enough. Footwork.
On FH side don't try to kill the ball too often either. When you have him back and are looping or smashing, you are in control. Just accept that it may take 3-6 shots to get it done. On the shorter ball fished back then you can find more angle or a drop shot to make him run but other than that just pin him back before switching side. Patience.
And I wouldn't be afraid to take a step back against him and use the 09c counterloop ability rather than tame blocking that puts you on the backfoot. Enjoy it! Just don't try to kill it, hit the table with control like he does. Your %s are going up then!
Tactics in, the short backspin to FH is safe, he doesn't FH flick and you got some direct points from good serves to there. But be ready to Chiquita or loop his push. Unless he pushes short to your FH in which case you push long to his exposed BH or (as he's steps back) go short to his FH again.
Long backspin to his BH looks safe, I didn't see any awesome BH opening loops.
If you can dial in your serves to get the half long really working then I can see you giving him problems.
His backspin serves to your FH is where you can really make an improvement though. You took the wrong option many times there, pushing long ones that should have been looped or misreading the short ones, kind of popping them up instead of stepping in to take it off the bounce to drop it short or really pushing it with proper backspin and a bit of speed!
Beware of his long backspin serves to your BH too, you gave away a few points directly from that. Game 1 and 3 finished with you missing the ball in there.
Actually all 3 games finished with you mistiming and outright missing a ball into your BH 🤷
Those are my observations for your preparation. Hopefully it helps some.
Cheers 👍