Having 2 differents blades to adapt to opponent playstyle (fast/slow)

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Hello guys,

What do you think about having almost the same setup on 2 different blades and chose before the game if you chose the fastest or the slowest blade.

Especially vs Long pimples grandpa it seems that you need to play faster game and a faster blade might help and on the opposite when you play versus a player wich is better and faster you might want to slow down the game a bit and play more with spin than speed.

I was thinking 1 inner carbon and 1 outer carbon , the inner is like the blade use by default and the outer when I need to speed up the game

Might be overthinking this but I kinda struggle against unusual weird style (mostly old dudes) with weird moves

thanks for your help take care
 
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If the difference in speed is high, you will make more unforced errors. If the difference is small, it will be just not worth the trouble. Best option is to change your game style, less spin, more speed. The second setup could be something for experimentation and feeding EJ demons.
 
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It really depends on your own style and ability to adapt to new equipment. I do use two different blades during tournaments. Inner Carbon for inverted players and Outer Carbon for Choppers and junk players. However, I also use a lot of new equipment, so my technique automatically adjusts.

The only time I really do this is when the game is less backhand focused. This is the case with choppers and lobbers. I love my FZD forehand, but the backhand is not as usable as my inner carbon blades. So when I don't really have to attack with my backhand, then I would switch.

There's also a mental aspect to the game. Having to make one extra decision before the game tends to make you less focused on what's actually important. Even spending 10% of your mental capacity to adapt between blades is generally not worth it. In addition, your confidence might go down when shots start missing the table. However, if you commit and enforce a strict rule, then it will help in that regard.

Worst thing you can do is lose and think it's the blade.
 
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Hello guys,

What do you think about having almost the same setup on 2 different blades and chose before the game if you chose the fastest or the slowest blade.

Especially vs Long pimples grandpa it seems that you need to play faster game and a faster blade might help and on the opposite when you play versus a player wich is better and faster you might want to slow down the game a bit and play more with spin than speed.

I was thinking 1 inner carbon and 1 outer carbon , the inner is like the blade use by default and the outer when I need to speed up the game

Might be overthinking this but I kinda struggle against unusual weird style (mostly old dudes) with weird moves

thanks for your help take care
Weird idea with no actual benefits. Train your technique and footwork harder. No shortcuts in table tennis
 
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I'll take the contrary position here, and say 'yes it can work...' but it really depends on the player in question, your playing style, the blades you choose, and the rubbers you team them with.

I preface what follows by confirming that using one common set-up with all your racquets, and practising a bigger range of skills more often with a coach, is always your best approach to improving your performance.

In some very rare cases however, this approach can actually sometimes fail you, for one reason or another.

That's when making equipment changes to support deficiencies in your game has the potential to assist you to varying degree -- it almost NEVER fully makes up for lack of regular practice, but it CAN still help you out substantively with being more competitive.

Little known fact: I take this exact approach myself quite regularly, but only through bitter necessity.

I've been working with a local coach to improve my game for about 3.5 years now, but its been a truly slow and frustrating process, due to my work. Apart from being aged over 50 now, I also have the issue of being far too busy to practice enough to improve.

But my biggest issue of all -- hands down -- is simply that I'm a blade maker. I'm constantly testing new blade models (and new blade/rubber combos) in my job for weeks at a time, all year round, come rain, hail or shine.

Working with so many diverse blades and rubbers gives me the skill to detect playing differences between blades better than most (if the rubbers are off), and it helps me diagnose faults, flaws or potential damage in a blade quite quickly.

Flip-side being, it also actively destabilises and degrades my sense of touch with my own regular personal set-up, as I never get the chance to grow fully accustomed to it for long.

Its an unavoidable consequence for me and others like me, that making blades means my own personal playing standards constantly suffer. If you were to ask Sergio the same question, I have no doubt he'd agree, and has experienced the exact same thing himself.

(Moral of the story: NEVER CHOP AND CHANGE YOUR GEAR TOO MUCH IF YOU WANT TO WIN!)

I get around this unique problem moderately successfully by using two *slightly* different set-ups in my serious matches (one that's speed + spin oriented, one that's spin + control oriented).

I'm a two-wing looper who loves to attack & counter on both wings. My game instinct is typically to favor power loops and drive-counters over slower loops and passive blocks or chop blocks. So logically enough, I prefer my own blades being on the quick-ish side.

Problem being, if I'm playing someone who's better at attacking than me, I usually need to reach deeper into my bag of tricks and vary my game a lot more. A slower, 'spin + control' set up really helps with this, as it makes dampening the other player's power a lot easier.

If you ARE going to go this way and try out two differing set-ups (against my own better advice of just practicing a wider range of skills more often), then IMO the trick lies in finding the exact right two blades, and the right rubber set-ups for you.

I'm lucky in that there's two blade models I make that are actually quite well suited to this technique. They have almost identical ply recipes, are are both fast and spinny blades in their own right, and both suit my regular game well. I also find being sneaky much easier and more successful with one of them than the other.

DO NOT try this though with one inner carbon and one outer carbon - that doesn't work in my experience as the difference is too profound.

Instead, maybe try out the following blade combos:

- two reasonably similar 5-ply all-woods,
- a 5-ply and a 7-ply all wood,
- a 7-ply all wood and an inner carbon
- or else two identical blades of any type, with identical rubbers on both (that also feature thicker/thinner sponge appropriately).

In closing, it bears repeating: consistency of equipment lies at the heart of consistency with your performance. Keeping to one stable set-up is super important if you're going to formally compete and play to win.

I however make and test very different blades regularly (a lot of them!) so my circumstances are different. By now I'm also about as used to wielding two different blades as a person can be.

For me, using two slightly dissimilar set ups is less of a big deal than it would be for others... yet my game still suffers hugely, due to lack of regular practice with consistent equipment.

You can be really good as a player, or you can be really good as a blade maker... but you can't be equally good at both -- they are mutually exclusive decisions.

I chose the latter path and I'm happy with my choice. But if your aim is to compete and win at the highest possible level you can, then its best to stick to one set up, and you can forget about making blades for a living. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤷
 
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Thanks for feedbacks , good part of being an EJ (beside the fun of testing new set up and see the differences) is that now I can adapat very quickly to new setups and can tell the difference beetween those.

I won't be pro so better have fun it's a game after all , my serious setup is the one in my bio and I like to have another one with :

Yinhe v14 Pro / Rxton 7 37° BH / Rxton 9 Nat FH (didn't boost as the blade is quite fast already I don't think it will be usefull at my lvl) which is a faster setup and I realize it work quite well against opponent that have a slow playstyle

But I did put a layer of seamoon on my H3N just to skip the running-in period of the Hurricane 3

I have also a 7 ply wood (DHS PG7) but the feeling of playing with a Carbon blade is just addictive , I prefer to have slower rubber and fast carbon blade than all wood with fasts rubber (G1 / Nuzn / Mx-P ect)

Another Part is also when I get tired after long days of Competitions my moves are not that efficient (especially with legs) and it's more difficult to activate the H3N as it requires a lot body weight transfer and i'm not getting any younger.

I'll keep having fun as it's the most important for me and part of this fun is to swap beetween those 2 setups when I want to.
 
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