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Can you explain this a bit more?Forget the contact. Just push long with your own force (get good contact) by borrowing the incoming sidespin, disregarding the topspin or backspin element. When faced with that, the most important thing is not to hesitate and just "touch" the ball.
Any vids or links of what you mean?That's how Waldner and Persson checkmated LGL after figuring out the trick.
I’m also interested in thisForget the contact. Just push long with your own force (get good contact) by borrowing the incoming sidespin, disregarding the topspin or backspin element. When faced with that, the most important thing is not to hesitate and just "touch" the ball. That's how Waldner and Persson checkmated LGL after figuring out the trick.
p.s.
Also, look for patterns. Like how Tanaka noticed that WCQ almost always served topspin with his shovel serve.
The problem with this is that hidden contact allows them to serve almost pure backspin and if the serve is heavy, you need to push it straight up.Forget the contact. Just push long with your own force (get good contact) by borrowing the incoming sidespin, disregarding the topspin or backspin element. When faced with that, the most important thing is not to hesitate and just "touch" the ball. That's how Waldner and Persson checkmated LGL after figuring out the trick.
p.s.
Also, look for patterns. Like how Tanaka noticed that WCQ almost always served topspin with his shovel serve.
There was a Div B player at my club that I liked to play because he hid his serves, mostly pure backspin and no-spin, which were easy to tell from the bounce even without seeing the contact.The problem with this is that hidden contact allows them to serve almost pure backspin and if the serve is heavy, you need to push it straight up.
It's as written in my last post. You have to figure out the specifics yourself. The folks at my club discussed how Waldner overcame LGL during one dinner in the early 2010s, over a decade after the fact, and that was the conclusion.Can you explain this a bit more?
Any vids or links of what you mean?
this is the key. You look for that slightly different motion.nearly the same motion.
I agree with the late receive but if the serve is fast coming at you then It’s difficultIf you cannot see the contact point then you have few options -
1. Try to judge by the bounce of the ball. This essentially means that you will have to do a late receive, meaning receiving after the peak of the bounce and you have to work with your placement and control of force. If I return the ball which lands deep and is slower then I buy time for myself to defend the next ball. So, in this case, you have to judge the trajectory and then decide on the placement and be ready to defend or possibly open the ball. Now, trajectory is a tricky part, but if you can do a decent backspin serve and decent topspin serve you should observe the trajectory of your own serves, this actually helps if you really observe as you will notice that a backspin ball slows down and sometimes skids on the table. Whereas a topspin serve seems to stretch further as it bounces. You can also try practicing the same serve and serve it to your opponent and observe his reaction. This would also give you some clues. There is no need to get that advanced in the same serve. Basically if you can do a decent backhand serve with side under or side top it will surely help.
2. I have seen a few players using this option as well, so worth mentioning. But this requires a lot of practice. You can basically slice on the bottom of the ball with very soft hands and make any serve return with backspin. Again, this is not easy and honestly, I tried it but with limited success. So I think I personally will go with option 1.
Fast coming at you usually means long.I agree with the late receive but if the serve is fast coming at you then It’s difficult
Long or half long yesFast coming at you usually means long.
For me, long serve, you just wait and loop. It is the heavy spin short ones that require you to commit over the table that tend to be more problematic. Not saying long serves can't cause trouble, but over time, you should get your fair share of makes and points if the opponent is the same level.Long or half long yes
Yes, I agree. On a fast serve, you need to do the following -I agree with the late receive but if the serve is fast coming at you then It’s difficult