Why amateur players should avoid fast gear and where power really comes from in table tennis.

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Seems like in Europe you have very strict opinions about equipment. Thanks for elaborating.
Please notice that all those high level players (and the 20-30 after them too) just choose rubbers for themselves. Hybrids are just not what they choose in accordance to their playstyles.
 
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Please notice that all those high level players (and the 20-30 after them too) just choose rubbers for themselves. Hybrids are just not what they choose in accordance to their playstyles.
I can imagine - the fact that people are still using Tenergy more than Dignics speaks for itself. I find that most people who use Dignics will feel a need for carbon. Just goes with the territory.
 
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I have coached kids and adult beginners with Viscarias and they have played fine. I never felt their issues were equipment related but they also didn't play enough to stick with the game for years, but as hitting partners, many people were impressed with their ball and spin control in practice, so any match issues were more about their competitive mindsets.
Since you did not do a controlled test you will never know if your own conclusion is actually the correct one. You put it down to lack of competitive mindsets, but it might as well them getting disillusioned because whatever they tried and trained they never got into the consistency with landing the ball that they would need to have a good go at becoming a better player or the player they wanted to be.

But since you seem to know people who got really good using all wood blades and no coaching, feel free to share your experience.
This is really a question of how you define getting "really good". For the average joe on this forum i think having 1700 TTR (in germany) would be better than what they are right now and judging by the first team of my club these players around that rating do play all wood (some even defensive blades) without being defenders, but pretty much alround players who basically have a good technique and are able to perform any technique reliably. The ones from that team that actually do play more aggressive use carbon blades and what should i say ? They "brute force" way of trying to overpower these alround players is just not consistent enough to trouble them really (even though they got a similar rating).

the "no coaching" part is of course tricky, because what exactly is coaching ? Is it 1 to 1 coaching, is it group coaching or is it just a person who believes to know a little bit trying to teach 20 kids running mayhem in a gym a few things. The later is what the regular situation is in many german clubs and the results show exactly that: no real players getting formed when just relying on club freebie training without involvement of the parents that pay up for it.

What i can definitely say is that people who started with a carbon blade might not benefit from an all wood blade, because the angle they would need to use on many strokes would be totally different and the adjustment would take quite some time. That does not mean that this very person would perhaps not be better if he started with all wood from the start.
 
says toooooo much choice!!
says toooooo much choice!!
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There is one thing that I’ve noticed when coaching 1st time beginners.
I get them to just bounce the ball on the bat, FH side then BH side - how long can they keep the ball bouncing before loosing control?
Now, there is no way they engage the blade, be it carbon, wood or whatever. With a soft bouncy rubber they loose control quick, real quick!! With a hard tacky rubber they keep the ball up for longer.
We have to loan out bat to some 1st time players, so I put Glazer and Friendship 729 on a Viscaria. Gave it to a beginner, Glazer on FH, 729 on BH.
Usually they have more trouble bouncing the ball on the BH. Not so with this set up, in fact the 2nd person I tried this with (starting on FH then BH) swapped the BH 729 onto the FH when I asked them to go back to the FH!!
With practice, and explanation, the players gained control when bouncing the ball with BOTH types of rubber, they realised that they could almost let the ball bounce on its own with a very small bat movement when using the glazer and a bigger bat movement with the 729.
So, which is better when you are a new player??
Everyone is different, they have different -
hand eye coordination levels,
natural ability,
motor coordination
athletic / movement etc etc
To start, a slower set up can be advantageous, BUT if there were ONLY fast set ups, they would still learn, some faster than others some slower.
Whether they get frustrated, disenchanted etc is another thing!! We see youngsters starting playing and then a year or season later dropping out, those using slower set ups and faster ones. Bear in mind these players are generally only playing for 1 hr a week!! Expectations and reality when playing, probably one of the most difficult games out there!!

Whats good for one player may not be good for another player!! BUT slower more controllable equipment is a reasonable place to start for many people. We had one very timid girl - timid from the point of view of hitting the ball, she was so gentle, she needed some bounce in the set up at first!!
Swings and roundabouts!!
 
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Since you did not do a controlled test you will never know if your own conclusion is actually the correct one. You put it down to lack of competitive mindsets, but it might as well them getting disillusioned because whatever they tried and trained they never got into the consistency with landing the ball that they would need to have a good go at becoming a better player or the player they wanted to be.


This is really a question of how you define getting "really good". For the average joe on this forum i think having 1700 TTR (in germany) would be better than what they are right now and judging by the first team of my club these players around that rating do play all wood (some even defensive blades) without being defenders, but pretty much alround players who basically have a good technique and are able to perform any technique reliably. The ones from that team that actually do play more aggressive use carbon blades and what should i say ? They "brute force" way of trying to overpower these alround players is just not consistent enough to trouble them really (even though they got a similar rating).

the "no coaching" part is of course tricky, because what exactly is coaching ? Is it 1 to 1 coaching, is it group coaching or is it just a person who believes to know a little bit trying to teach 20 kids running mayhem in a gym a few things. The later is what the regular situation is in many german clubs and the results show exactly that: no real players getting formed when just relying on club freebie training without involvement of the parents that pay up for it.

What i can definitely say is that people who started with a carbon blade might not benefit from an all wood blade, because the angle they would need to use on many strokes would be totally different and the adjustment would take quite some time. That does not mean that this very person would perhaps not be better if he started with all wood from the start.
There were some that were told that rhey had started with equipment that was too fast and they should use something slower. They often didn't like it. But what I never did because they never seriously competed was get into aerve return training, which is usually where lots of interesting things really start. But there is a tradeoff between hitting rhe ball faster and being consistent that everyone experiences. Sometimes people act like the tradeoff acts only one way. But it is more complicated than that. Ultimate you use waht keeps you playing.

I still play all wood on some days and it doesn't affect my level against some players. But it does affect my arthritis. And I started getting back into all wood again because of Zyre. But I still have my Korbels and Mazunovs lying around. But the main point here is that the coaching matters the moat and the range training matters the most. Saying that someone plays well with a blade he hasnt been trained to use is interesting but it is their ability to adapt that is always critical, but most people just want you to play well rather than adapt and train you to adapt.
 
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There is no singular correct answer in TT and as Dr. Thomas Sowell sez about solutions to a "problem" that there are only trade-offs. (and NL fully understands this concept)
Agreed to this with all its TT nuances, but as long as one is aware of the tradeoffs it works, problem being when people are not.
I absolutely agree that every case is different and should be treated differently.
This is essentially the same as @Der_Echte says and I agree too :)
In my experience as a coach in my club (200 + people of all levels) I would say the majority of people (not all of them, the majority) who really need to switch to a more controllable setup are intermediate to upper intermediate level (maybe 1500 to 2000?), especially players who are not under 20 anymore and got too excited and thought they needed a outer carbon missile (edit. viscaria is also an outer carbon mini missile in my view) but (spoiler alert which is really just common sense in my view) really play better with something more controlled (I have adviced this to 5 to 10 people, and all of them came back to me after some time happier with their play).
This is the exact target audience of my post, which accounts for a lot of the TT players out there. I wonder what's the % from the total players.
Please notice that literally everyone in our club gets coached, no one individually, it's all group sessions, but still coached.

Because our club is more structured and there is always at least one coach in every training session of any level, beginners do not get lost in the EJ, they just use whatever we give them. Almost noone gets lost to EJ really, coaches advise them on what to do.
This is great, is it normal in Italy to have this? In NL I don't see this as a normal pattern, some clubs really care about training, others don't at all.
There's another factor to consider: having a really demanding setup requires not only a solid technique and foundations but also being fit in order to get the most out of it. In other words, I've seen many former great players that can't no longer train as B4 keeping same setup as they where still in their prime. They don't even realize that they can't match to any youngster regardless their equipment since the lack the reaction speed as any individual 20 years younger than you.

I've been 30 years into the game and despite I'm still pretty decent player but that doesn't meant I've come into terms that I have peaked long time ago and would hardly keep improving let alone at my adulthood with barely 3-4 h per week.

In other words: sometimes it's not equipment that dampens our progress but also our sheer limits according to physical, age or circumstances
And this is also very true, there are some players in our club with body limitations, for them, equipment is more a way to help them play as good as they can, nothing else, and recommendations do not follow normal rules there.
 
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How is playing better/happier measured?

Winning more matches against better players, losing less to worse players etc. Do you have a rating/ranking system and what were the changes as a result of changing equipment? Fewer injuries?
I think being happier is different per person. Some people in our club are happy they can come to the club and hit a couple good balls, that's happiness for them. Others get happier if they learn something they could never do before, and are happy when they can do them in matches too, that's also what you'd say playing better. Others look into the ratings/tournaments and use that as the measure. I think, playing better is not only better results or better technique but doing more of what the player wants to do if it makes sense for the player. That's also where happiness usually comes from.

This is the same as @Matteones means here, I agree:
When I say "if they have fun with it, they'll get better with it." I mean that I believe through personal enjoyment (however they personally want to measure that, it's subjective) they bring more will to training and playing which is what ultimately gets amateur to become better.
 
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I think being happier is different per person. Some people in our club are happy they can come to the club and hit a couple good balls, that's happiness for them. Others get happier if they learn something they could never do before, and are happy when they can do them in matches too, that's also what you'd say playing better. Others look into the ratings/tournaments and use that as the measure. I think, playing better is not only better results or better technique but doing more of what the player wants to do if it makes sense for the player. That's also where happiness usually comes from.

This is the same as @Matteones means here, I agree:
That's true, but it leaves open a lot of things to subjectivity. But as @jk1980 pointed out, lack of rigor affects everyone's argument. Maybe with Spinsight, over time, data will inform more of these choices.
 
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No they did not go to what they used before, usually if I give such an advice it's because it is clear the equipment is really a bad choice for them, otherwise I think equipment is anyway a very minor aspect to focus on.
Same in my case, most of the times people had a wrong setup before and then a wrong setup now too as they changed without really understanding where they came from or went to. Otherwise, like @Matteones mentions, if I see equipment is fine-ish, I would not say anything and just let them focus on technique and getting better in peace.
Playing better is measured by their results, yes we have a ranking system and a league system, very structured: local --> regional --> national, played pretty much every weekend for the federated players (who are 60 - 70% of the club members, with the rest being true amateurs of a very low level, tipically 1 year of play, or very old, or very young) from September to June.
Yep same, plus for people who don't play in competitions, tecnique, footwork, tacticts is what determines better. Plus own happiness ofc.

Only the top 2-3 players of our club use D09C or some similar hybrid (both "low level" professionals, playing in various leagues in Europe). We then have 10 professionals and mostly semi-professionals ranked under them, none of whom uses hybrid (with me being at the very bottom of these 10 being the only one who was using hybrids, now I have put a H3). I can tell you exactly which rubbers they are using if you want, it's tenergy05, nittaku genextion, joola dynaryz AGR, ACC, Tenergy 80, one tried zyre and is going back to tenergy 05, dignics 05, Hexer don't remember which one, Tenergy 19, I may forget some more. Most used blade is for sure Viscaria).

Of the following players, let's say the next 20-30 players are high level amateurs (1900 - 2200 USATT more or less I imagine), most of them young (under 25 - with some exception of good players with a lot of experience) who play in lower national league and higher regional leagues, of which one already has a hybrid because we saw it fitting for his game.
Another young player (16-17) who is quite lower level (maybe 1500?) in comparison to the other similar age kids of the same group is using the D09C that one of the top players has gifted him, and he really shouldn't as they are way too hard for him and whilst he sometimes looks good in open rally training exercises, he has very little control in real matches situation.
Let me explain our club structure here too, maybe that helps the discussion.

We have about 130 members and abour 20 teams scattered across regional and national level. The netherland is smaller than Italy so just region and national leagues. A total of 8 divisions regionally and 4 divisions nationally, the division of honor being the highest of all. We're for sure smaller and less pro than Matteo's club.

From our members, the highest play either under the division of honor, or one below, they alternate depending on team composition. In the long past a few played division of honor. From these, the older players have played for a long time with the same equipment and don't have really fast and stiff outer blades with dignics/tenergy/zyre. The younger ones have faster blades and for sure dignics/tenergy. Often dignics 05 or T05 (hard and sfot). None play 09c, hybrids or chinese rubbers on FH, mostly we are a 'tensor' club, me being the only weirdo :) From the lowest national levels the same pattern applies, the older generation uses normal tensor rubbers, nothing fancy, the young ones come with the heavy stuff ;) In total we have about 10 national men and 6 national women. Women's game is lower in level, and rubbers/blades there are normally intermediate things. Some rubbers I see (and have pasted) often from all these players that are not young ones: Fastarc G-1, Gewo El Pro 48, Razka 7, Stiga Platinum, Stiga Mantra, Tibhar Nimbus, Xiom Vega X/Pro. For blades, a mix of all things, outer, inner, all wood. For sure Viscaria is not the most used blade, in fact, almost nobody uses it or has used it. Blades that are common: Timo Boll ALC (yes outer but more controlled than other outers), Innerforce ALC for example. Funny how people do TB ALC which is the same as viscaria (wood wise), but no viscaria, I wonder why.

Then the regional level, usually I see the same mixed pattern but with more 'elite' rubbers here as people try to change more often to 'boost' their performance. Most people train twice a week for about 2-3 hours so it's not super intensive. I see here more tenergies in comparison to the above group, often 05, sometimes 80 or 64. Also dignics 05 is not uncommon for people to try, one player tried 09c and hated it and threw it away in 1 week (pity he didn't give it to me xD). The rest a mix of tensor rubbers again. Mostly I see yasaka, gewo, xiom, tibhar, stiga and donic dominating, things like the above mentioned but also bluefire for example or dragongrip. Blades a mix of things too, outerforce ALC, Xiom Stradivarius, Joola Tezzo warrior, hurricane long 3, violoncello, acoustic, korbel, skc7, true carbon, innerforce ZLF from top of my mind now.

We are bigger on adults than kids but it's growing now, kids use usually all wood, some inner but most all wood 5 or 7 plies, and the majority does normal tensors, only a few play with hurricanes like me.

Hopefully that helps a bit understanding our european club!

Would be nice if others explain their club structure and most common equipment too!
 
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Seems like in Europe you have very strict opinions about equipment. Thanks for elaborating.
This is interesting @NextLevel , do you feel like in other continents is more freeform or more varied opinions? Or is it perhaps some countries in Europe? I see a lot more pips in Spain for example than in the Netherlands in comparison.
That's true, but it leaves open a lot of things to subjectivity. But as @jk1980 pointed out, lack of rigor affects everyone's argument. Maybe with Spinsight, over time, data will inform more of these choices.
Yeah true, for ranking, most objective is ranking and/or tournament performance aside from technical/tactical improvements weekly. For happiness I think we can be a bit more freeform there :)
 
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This is interesting @NextLevel , do you feel like in other continents is more freeform or more varied opinions? Or is it perhaps some countries in Europe? I see a lot more pips in Spain for example than in the Netherlands in comparison.

Yeah true, for ranking, most objective is ranking and/or tournament performance aside from technical/tactical improvements weekly. For happiness I think we can be a bit more freeform there :)
I am just surprised that there is so little Dignics and hybrid/sticky rubbers. Dignics and Hybrid/sticky rubbers broadly is part of what drives the need for carbon. While it is possible to use Dignics 05 on all wood, it's a very different when you use it something that sends the ball forward. But seeing all the old tensor technology and Tenergy, I can see why one would not do well with carbon. Though I think even with G1, one is entering a space where carbon can be pretty helpful.
 
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the "no coaching" part is of course tricky, because what exactly is coaching ? Is it 1 to 1 coaching, is it group coaching or is it just a person who believes to know a little bit trying to teach 20 kids running mayhem in a gym a few things. The later is what the regular situation is in many german clubs and the results show exactly that: no real players getting formed when just relying on club freebie training without involvement of the parents that pay up for it.
This is the same as in the netherlands often, which results in what you mention @jk1980 . For me, true coaching must be 1 to 1 or a very reduced group so they can focus on you personally for a longer period of time. As as example that this even happens in 'pro' training places, when I went to the borussia dusseldorf (andro TT schule) center, many people didn't take the 1 to 1 coaching lessons and when i spoke to some of them, they said, well, it was just a bit better than at home with some personal tips and tricks, but mostly just training 4 days in a row with similar things we do at home. Yes, there was a bit more personalised coaching but results happen when you do 1 to 1, multiball and repeatedly.
 
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There is one thing that I’ve noticed when coaching 1st time beginners.
I get them to just bounce the ball on the bat, FH side then BH side - how long can they keep the ball bouncing before loosing control?
Now, there is no way they engage the blade, be it carbon, wood or whatever. With a soft bouncy rubber they loose control quick, real quick!! With a hard tacky rubber they keep the ball up for longer.
We have to loan out bat to some 1st time players, so I put Glazer and Friendship 729 on a Viscaria. Gave it to a beginner, Glazer on FH, 729 on BH.
Usually they have more trouble bouncing the ball on the BH. Not so with this set up, in fact the 2nd person I tried this with (starting on FH then BH) swapped the BH 729 onto the FH when I asked them to go back to the FH!!
With practice, and explanation, the players gained control when bouncing the ball with BOTH types of rubber, they realised that they could almost let the ball bounce on its own with a very small bat movement when using the glazer and a bigger bat movement with the 729.
So, which is better when you are a new player??
Everyone is different, they have different -
hand eye coordination levels,
natural ability,
motor coordination
athletic / movement etc etc
To start, a slower set up can be advantageous, BUT if there were ONLY fast set ups, they would still learn, some faster than others some slower.
Whether they get frustrated, disenchanted etc is another thing!! We see youngsters starting playing and then a year or season later dropping out, those using slower set ups and faster ones. Bear in mind these players are generally only playing for 1 hr a week!! Expectations and reality when playing, probably one of the most difficult games out there!!

Whats good for one player may not be good for another player!! BUT slower more controllable equipment is a reasonable place to start for many people. We had one very timid girl - timid from the point of view of hitting the ball, she was so gentle, she needed some bounce in the set up at first!!
Swings and roundabouts!!
This was all a very good read @IB66 , specially the part that if you only had fast stuff, people would still learn, some faster, some slower. But as a 'generic' rule of thumb, it is indeed easier to start slow and then upgrade as you grow. The problem is that generic might not apply to everybody. Kids are different, coaching or no coaching, talent or no talent, etc. Maybe the title of the post should be why some amateurs (given conditions xyz) should avoid fast gear, but yeah, then the title would not fit in the box hahaha
 
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But what I never did because they never seriously competed was get into aerve return training, which is usually where lots of interesting things really start. But there is a tradeoff between hitting rhe ball faster and being consistent that everyone experiences. Sometimes people act like the tradeoff acts only one way
When points are at stake and you got to receive a tricky serve, things break indeed :) And also the tradeoff part, very true.
I am just surprised that there is so little Dignics and hybrid/sticky rubbers. Dignics and Hybrid/sticky rubbers broadly is part of what drives the need for carbon. While it is possible to use Dignics 05 on all wood, it's a very different when you use it something that sends the ball forward. But seeing all the old tensor technology and Tenergy, I can see why one would not do well with carbon. Though I think even with G1, one is entering a space where carbon can be pretty helpful.
You know what's funny, yesterday I was at the club with my good friend andy from china. He has been playing his whole life and is now at the lowest national level approx. He played 30 years with the butterfly taksim, unboosted H3 and long pips on penhold, is 50y old and a condition beast, mostly a FH looper and rest block and placement. Anyways, his frame broke last week on a tournament (emotional damage was settling in still) and yesterday there he was with a Viscaria Super ALC + Dignics 09c FH. He said it felt very different than his gear before, we had a good laugh together.
The earlier I say nobody plays viscaria and 09c in our club, the earlier somebody proves me wrong 🤣
 
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There is one thing that I’ve noticed when coaching 1st time beginners.
I get them to just bounce the ball on the bat, FH side then BH side - how long can they keep the ball bouncing before loosing control?
Now, there is no way they engage the blade, be it carbon, wood or whatever. With a soft bouncy rubber they loose control quick, real quick!! With a hard tacky rubber they keep the ball up for longer.
We have to loan out bat to some 1st time players, so I put Glazer and Friendship 729 on a Viscaria. Gave it to a beginner, Glazer on FH, 729 on BH.
Usually they have more trouble bouncing the ball on the BH. Not so with this set up, in fact the 2nd person I tried this with (starting on FH then BH) swapped the BH 729 onto the FH when I asked them to go back to the FH!!
With practice, and explanation, the players gained control when bouncing the ball with BOTH types of rubber, they realised that they could almost let the ball bounce on its own with a very small bat movement when using the glazer and a bigger bat movement with the 729.
So, which is better when you are a new player??
Everyone is different, they have different -
hand eye coordination levels,
natural ability,
motor coordination
athletic / movement etc etc
To start, a slower set up can be advantageous, BUT if there were ONLY fast set ups, they would still learn, some faster than others some slower.
Whether they get frustrated, disenchanted etc is another thing!! We see youngsters starting playing and then a year or season later dropping out, those using slower set ups and faster ones. Bear in mind these players are generally only playing for 1 hr a week!! Expectations and reality when playing, probably one of the most difficult games out there!!

Whats good for one player may not be good for another player!! BUT slower more controllable equipment is a reasonable place to start for many people. We had one very timid girl - timid from the point of view of hitting the ball, she was so gentle, she needed some bounce in the set up at first!!
Swings and roundabouts!!
It depends on a lor of things. The truth is that sometimes, what you get used to is what you adapt to and breaking off it can be hard. It is also possible and just as easy to start fast and go slower, or all the equipment experts here are advocating by recommending corrective actions. One of the things that isn't accounted for is how often a player can feel TT requires too much effort and then when introduced to faster equipment, plays much bette and enjoys the fame more. This is not just true for lower rated players by the way. Stellan Bengston gave Kou Lei as an example of a player whose game took off when he started using European/Japanese rubbers on both sides. In reality, the bias towards the wisdom derived from the cell ball is so pervasive that rather than encourage range training, the default is to put itbdown to equipment being too fast before range training has been attempted. To be fair equipment is easier to change. But as you point out with the girl (and there are many people suffering in silence as well because most equipment choices are relatively arbitrary), there are many people who would learn in a more relaxed fashion and with a focus on spin by being coached with faster equipment. A lot comes down to how you wanr to build the player in the first place.
 
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Agreed to this with all its TT nuances, but as long as one is aware of the tradeoffs it works, problem being when people are not.

This is essentially the same as @Der_Echte says and I agree too :)

This is the exact target audience of my post, which accounts for a lot of the TT players out there. I wonder what's the % from the total players.

This is great, is it normal in Italy to have this? In NL I don't see this as a normal pattern, some clubs really care about training, others don't at all.

And this is also very true, there are some players in our club with body limitations, for them, equipment is more a way to help them play as good as they can, nothing else, and recommendations do not follow normal rules there.
I am Italian but I live in Madrid, Spain, and I think we are the biggest club (in terms of numbers of players) in Spain, I wouldn't say it's normal, even if I'm quite sure all the medium-big clubs in the region have at least one coach.
My club structure is similar to yours if bigger: 5 "international" players, 25 - 30 national players, 25-30 high regional, 100+ low regional level, 50+ not even playing in a league players.

International players: 3 outer carbon blades, one uses wood and another one just switched from wood to outer carbon. 2 use hybrids and the others tensors.

National and high regional players, many have some type of carbon blades, outer more often than inner, some use pure wood. Large majority using tensors.

Low regional have an assortment that I don't really follow, the ones I follow more closely, young ones, all start with all-wood or anyway controllable carbon woods, they can then choose to upgrade when they approach the high regional level. Large majority using tensors.

P.S. when I say Viscaria blade, I also mean Timo Boll ALC that is really the same (yes, yes, there is some difference, but it's the same racket really), or one of the many blades from competition that are really similar.

P.P.S.: my favourite example is an old player (75-80 years old) with little to no mobility who is passionate about ping-pong and is at a very very low level (he doesn't compete and if he did he would lose at the lowest level) who uses a SALC Viscaria with top rubbers (don't remember which) which is in every way detrimental for his game, he has 0 or negative control. But his focus is not competing nor winning, he just has fun and once I had a chat with him and asked what his motivations are (mainly stay active and social and have fun) I do not tell him to change his blade and rubbers, because he has fun with it and doesn't care. But point remains that any other blade and rubber would really be better for him.

P.P.P.S.: The international very low level professional on the verge to semi-pro player who switched from wood to carbon looking for a bit more power (he is an incredibly stable player but lacking finishing shots) plays exactly the same as before, with the same results. Because guess what: his technique is the same.
 
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The earlier I say nobody plays viscaria and 09c in our club, the earlier somebody proves me wrong 🤣
I suspect a large part of this is due to the traditional Dutch mentality (both the lack of pips and high end gear).
- If it works, don't change it. Players growing up with wood blades or slow "carbon" equivalents like Waldner Senso Carbon (I see quite a lot of this specific blade in the higher regional classes up to division levels) are unlikely to change. Coaches are unlikely to advise anything faster. Using fast equipment is considered bragging and bragging is a negative thing in our culture.
- Pimples, about 80% of pimple players I know of are people who are old, in the category that they started playing when pimples were still the mainstay type of rubber. There were maybe 5 pimples players under the age of 60 in the recent regionals tournament, out of 250+ entries.

People don't want to stand out, don't want to be different, because doing that has such negative connotations in our culture. "Just be normal, that's crazy enough." is one of those famous Dutch sayings that just illustrates all of this perfectly.

Honestly, sometimes I feel like playing an attacking is even regarded as too much (in the lower regions). People don't believe in improving by taking risks.
 
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Oct 2014
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There are grandmas with BTY carbon + D09C max on both sides in my club who do not even know how to hold the racket properly, yet alone hit a simple drive.
I laugh so hard when I see their equipment.
Would you laugh similarly if an old woman learning to drive took a Porsche out? A Lexus?
 
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