says
twiddle!
says
twiddle!
Active Member
So since I've taken interest in the chopper playing style, I've noticed that there are a few Chinese choppers (specifically Hou Yingchao and Wang Xi) who chop with short pips instead of long pips. Why do they choose short pips?
From my experience playing with short pips it seems that they are MUCH less stable for chopping compared to long pips. I can definitely see advantages of playing with short pips on the backhand -- being able to punch and give float balls -- but these SP choppers don't seem to use these advantages very much, they mostly just chop. And their chop looks much more awkward than the chop of a long pips player. So then why not play with long pips? Seems like they lose stability without gaining much advantage.
From my experience playing with short pips it seems that they are MUCH less stable for chopping compared to long pips. I can definitely see advantages of playing with short pips on the backhand -- being able to punch and give float balls -- but these SP choppers don't seem to use these advantages very much, they mostly just chop. And their chop looks much more awkward than the chop of a long pips player. So then why not play with long pips? Seems like they lose stability without gaining much advantage.
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