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Ok I agree with some stuff you wrote and some stuff not at all(eg hitting the ball almost parallel, or keeping elbow too close to body. If you watch pros they have it started close and then they open their armpit alot depending on the ball aswell so I actually see no problem here) My hit timing also got fixed. I dont have my elbow almost in front of the ball.I also start accelerating with my forearm before I am parallel with the ball which was bad before.The topspin at 5:16 failed because your arm path was too horizontal. The swing needs to be diagonal — from bottom to top. Your elbow drifts away from the body, and at times the motion turns into a scooping action. Keep the elbow tucked in, close to yourself
Overall, your forehand topspin technique isn’t truly fundamentally wrong. The real problem is rotation, swing trajectory, and tension. Your arm is too stiff. You need to relax it and practically let it go during the swing, keeping no tension. Start with the elbow close to the body, racket near the side or slightly behind the thigh in the backswing. Push off with the leg, contact the ball beside your body, as in the ball needs to be almost parallel to your body, right side, which you already do fairly well
Important detail: the elbow should stay tight to the body at the start. Only release it once acceleration has already begun. That’s what creates a proper outer arc and real acceleration. Find the contact point where your acceleration peaks — that’s where the ball should be struck
Your follow-through also needs work. It should finish around eye level or higher. Right now, you’re often forcing the racket down at the end, pressing down, which kills penetration. The goal is to drive through the ball forward, not press it down. However, this issue mainly seems to surface because of your height — you seem like a tall person, so you need to assume a wider stance and squat a little more
P.S. Your biggest issue is overcomplication. You’re paying attention to details that don’t matter while missing the fundamentals — "activating sponge", feedback this, activating that... It's like trying to study the inside of the leaf without seeing it as a whole, or its shape. Table tennis works like a machine, except it's your body — the more unnecessary moving parts you add, the faster it breaks. Keep movements compact and close to the body. Anything that drifts away loses control and will break down under pressure. Move your feet. And above all: keep the elbow beside your body during forehand attacks. If it leaves before a proper kinetic chain is initiated, the whole stroke collapses because that means you have already done something wrong besides the technique itself — wasn't fast enough to prepare, perhaps too far away from the ball, poor positioning
That's my 2 cents. I have nothing else to add. Hopefully it helps. I have been training my technique rigourously since I started (little over 2 years ago), so, if needed, I may provide what I deem to be a correct stroke in "shadow form" which has been approved by multiple actual professionals, trainers, high level players
Maybe some balls I am still "stiff" mostly I felt like I am actually too loose. Still experimenting here to find the right balance (too loose means my stroke gets wobbly or makes me not control the arc on the ball.
I agree on other things like squatting more standing wider elbow needs to be in a line when hitting the ball etc.
Still thanks for your feedback!
Also here is from the Session on Friday:
No big changes. I still do same mistakes. Maybe this time watching the matches towards the end is more "interesting"
I couldn't find the time to analyze myself.
Also didn't film myself today. I changed both sides to some months used D09c rubbers. Felt very comfortable especially on bh. Man I ripped some nice balls with my bh "finishers" (during matchplay and it landed on the table aswell!) Aswell with the fh but for some reason with the bh I get a bigger dopamine hit lol.
Today I was struggeling with the fh warmup again hitting mostly out. I slowly start to think it might be the rubber actually. It's really hard to loop the ball at the peak close to the table. If I wait till it drops to tableheight (lower than the net) I have good arc but its mainly topsheet and "soft and safe" but I can also go really hard and spin it to make it land on the table aswell. It might be the throw angle of the rubber idk. I def felt more "comfortable" using the G1 I think. I will go try to train tomorrow aswell and see if I will struggle again in the warmup.
My trainingscamp in germany will start in 5 days so I am excited. I will def go with the korbel and d09c setup on the bh. Will decide about d09c or g1 on the fh after tomorrows session. I will still bring my W968 setup and maybe try it for a session or so and talk with the coaches there maybe they can give me some inputs in that regard.
My goal is to use the same motion for long backspin loops and also against block (against block more into the ball and more horizontal motion)
Oh yeah and today I was very successful with countertopspin his opening loops. Prob the first time I had over 50% success rate. I am getting really better with that stroke finally.
Sorry my post is all over the place. Next post I will try to do it more organized. Also there won't be footage till I come back from the camp. Next very important tournament will be on middle of January. It's actually the most important tournament of the year. I hope I can show good effort there. Time is running.