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Hey all,
I'm just new to the forum even though I have been checking information and following Dan and co for a long time, just lurking in the shadows and learning
After playing table tennis now for about 8+ years and being the amateur (beginners, intermediates) coach of our club for around 2 years now (130-140 people approx), this year I decided to start my own table tennis equipment help site with a blog next to it. For a bit of background on myself, I'm spanish but live in the netherlands (wife is a dutch, lang leven orange dus) now for 13 years. I stopped playing regular competition a while ago (nights became too late with family and work life balance) but still play one day tournaments when I can. This month I became doubles champion in the south holland championships in the category E (roughly 1600-1700 TTR as germans friends told me). SO i'm just a decent intermediate player with a healthy obssesion for material and I love teaching our amateurs and seeing them improve.
Anyways, as I said before, this year finally I decided to start writting stuff about TT (best sport in the world ofc) and this week I wrote about a topic that I feel strongly about: fast gear and people that are still developing their technique, aka, us the amateurs. I post it on reddit and it became a bit of a big discussion that I have really enjoyed so far, so many different insights and people coming together to a topic that in my eyes benefits the brands but hurts the sport as a whole, and for sure make people lose a lot of money and time instead of focusing on technique. Even though I offer equipment advice, my first advice is and will always be, focus on technique.
In any case, since I have got a lot of value from this forum before, I thought to bring something back and post it here too. Perhaps nobody reads it but hey, if some people start reconsidering their choices and focusing more on technique rather than on EJ-ing their way up, then I'm happy.
So here it is, happy as always to get some good backlash, I think it always enriches the conversation. And hope you friends like it. I will stick around and collaborate more from now on, thanks for making this great forum and for all the videos, always good fun!!! ❤️
Link to post: https://www.tabletennisequipmenthelp.com/blog/why-amateur-players-should-avoid-fast-gear
PS. My gear is moderately fast, I know, but I have played with it for a long time and I can control it all good. Before I ate all my dogfood and went from Stiga AC with 729fx to H3 unboosted both sides, then 1 layer booster same blade, then violin same rubbers, the acoustic same rubbers, then my current gear. But all those changes were made with good awareness why and when the moment was ripe. In case some of you were wondering
I'm just new to the forum even though I have been checking information and following Dan and co for a long time, just lurking in the shadows and learning
After playing table tennis now for about 8+ years and being the amateur (beginners, intermediates) coach of our club for around 2 years now (130-140 people approx), this year I decided to start my own table tennis equipment help site with a blog next to it. For a bit of background on myself, I'm spanish but live in the netherlands (wife is a dutch, lang leven orange dus) now for 13 years. I stopped playing regular competition a while ago (nights became too late with family and work life balance) but still play one day tournaments when I can. This month I became doubles champion in the south holland championships in the category E (roughly 1600-1700 TTR as germans friends told me). SO i'm just a decent intermediate player with a healthy obssesion for material and I love teaching our amateurs and seeing them improve.
Anyways, as I said before, this year finally I decided to start writting stuff about TT (best sport in the world ofc) and this week I wrote about a topic that I feel strongly about: fast gear and people that are still developing their technique, aka, us the amateurs. I post it on reddit and it became a bit of a big discussion that I have really enjoyed so far, so many different insights and people coming together to a topic that in my eyes benefits the brands but hurts the sport as a whole, and for sure make people lose a lot of money and time instead of focusing on technique. Even though I offer equipment advice, my first advice is and will always be, focus on technique.
In any case, since I have got a lot of value from this forum before, I thought to bring something back and post it here too. Perhaps nobody reads it but hey, if some people start reconsidering their choices and focusing more on technique rather than on EJ-ing their way up, then I'm happy.
So here it is, happy as always to get some good backlash, I think it always enriches the conversation. And hope you friends like it. I will stick around and collaborate more from now on, thanks for making this great forum and for all the videos, always good fun!!! ❤️
Link to post: https://www.tabletennisequipmenthelp.com/blog/why-amateur-players-should-avoid-fast-gear
PS. My gear is moderately fast, I know, but I have played with it for a long time and I can control it all good. Before I ate all my dogfood and went from Stiga AC with 729fx to H3 unboosted both sides, then 1 layer booster same blade, then violin same rubbers, the acoustic same rubbers, then my current gear. But all those changes were made with good awareness why and when the moment was ripe. In case some of you were wondering