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Miwa: "Dracarys!"Winter is coming.
Miwa: "Dracarys!"Winter is coming.
There's more coming. French players are like cockroaches, apparentlyAdam mentioning you have to keep the palm flat unless you're Natalia Partyka was wild.
Pffffff, lucky boy!Felix possibly saved by flash.
That's normal, the guy in front wasn't Korean.Pffffff, lucky boy!
Hugo doesn't either.Adam mentioning you have to keep the palm flat unless you're Natalia Partyka was wild.
Hard to tell. XP took out Assar, Felix and Moregard last year. Felix was hot coming off the Paris 2024 and his "slump" didn't start until that loss to Duda at ETTC two weeks later.Felix has improved a lot comparing to last year. This Chen Yuanyu is much stronger than last year Xiang Peng, in terms of international experience and match tactics but somehow he still manages to go through.
I agree. He had so much success as a junior with his junior style that he never was forced to mature and evolve. His style has always been a rally style. When he is hot, he can feel like a wall like how he played FZD at the Olympics.From what I observe with Harimoto, he always prioritises (habit) not making a mistake with his FH so he is always going for a lot of spin in his contact instead of just going forward through the ball boldly. This is especially when he faces unfamiliar opponents.
He is perfectly capable of executing powerful loopkills with his FH, so I'm not sure why he tends to play so hesitant and goes for safety all the time. On the other hand you have Togami who doesn't have it in his dictionary- guy doesn't know how to play safe at all!
Career wise, it's hard to describe LGY as a great player. A player with lightening fast speed and unique great backhand but with fragile mental strength and lackluster international performance, coupled with the high expectation on him and the numerous opportunity Chinese coaches gave him, he really is a underachiever.looked like it. the way he waved to the crowd as he left...chances are that this is the last time we get to see him in action.
melancholic end to a great player's career
I think he's an overachiever who reached the absolute limits of his ability. Many skinny but successful athletes are much stronger than they look, but I don't think that's the case for LGY. He has to go all out all the time to generate useful power at the highest level. His margin for error is vanishingly small, and so it's no surprise that he's more liable to break down under pressure than other top players. I'd agree he's not the mentally toughest player, but no mentally weak player has ever had anything close to his level of success.Career wise, it's hard to describe LGY as a great player. A player with lightening fast speed and unique great backhand but with fragile mental strength and lackluster international performance, coupled with the high expectation on him and the numerous opportunity Chinese coaches gave him, he really is a underachiever.
The mentally weak thing is always the narrative rather than looking at the objective strength of a player. At best, he was tremendously unlucky. But no one gets that great at TT being mentally weak, he outperformed so many players to get to where he is that the narrative is a bit skewed towards remembering his failures and forgetting some of his major successes.I think he's an overachiever who reached the absolute limits of his ability. Many skinny but successful athletes are much stronger than they look, but I don't think that's the case for LGY. He has to go all out all the time to generate useful power at the highest level. His margin for error is vanishingly small, and so it's no surprise that he's more liable to break down under pressure than other top players. I'd agree he's not the mentally toughest player, but no mentally weak player has ever had anything close to his level of success.
Someone who was a main member of the CNT and a top-10 to top-5 player for the better part of a decade is "not great"? That's a high bar lol.Career wise, it's hard to describe LGY as a great player. A player with lightening fast speed and unique great backhand but with fragile mental strength and lackluster international performance, coupled with the high expectation on him and the numerous opportunity Chinese coaches gave him, he really is a underachiever.
Been in the CNT for so many years just shows he is tremendously talented (speed, quickness, let alone unique great backhand, traits natural and hard to train), no one can deny that. Talent alone doesn't define greatness, but overall achievement does, for Chinese, which is big stage international competitions. Compared to his teammates of similar talent level, he falls really short. Worse, people usually remember his big game failures, which he has plenty, that's just part of human nature.Someone who was a main member of the CNT and a top-10 to top-5 player for the better part of a decade is "not great"? That's a high bar lol.
Existing at the same time as ML FZD and ZJK and having a few notable massive chokes and mental game issues definitely prevented him from being an all-time great, but, still a lot of room for greatness below that.
Put bluntly, Togami is dumb, not unlike Hayata. And in that sense, he's hardly improved. He already has the weapons, but it comes down to how he wields them. He has the swords but not the shields and how to get him to wield his swords defensively is the million dollar question. 七傷拳/cutting off his nose to spite his face, so to speak. For the time being, Ueda doesn't think it is ideal to "color him in his own way".One key aspect to note not only in that last point but also other rallies is that Togami often moves away at the start of the loop to loop then tries to move in for the kill, but he doesn't change his pace and power to throw Lin off beforehand causing the returning ball being too difficult to kill. Not to mention Lin's amazing long range play, crazy how coach Ueda or Togami himself never once thought of a drop shot or soft block after pushing Lin away from the table
One player LGY can compare to is former teammate Fang Bo, about the same age group. Early in their career (youth competition and entering national team), FB was ahead of LGY.Been in the CNT for so many years just shows he is tremendously talented (speed, quickness, let alone unique great backhand, traits natural and hard to train), no one can deny that. Talent alone doesn't define greatness, but overall achievement does, for Chinese, which is big stage international competitions. Compared to his teammates of similar talent level, he falls really short. Worse, people usually remember his big game failures, which he has plenty, that's just part of human nature.
Compare him to a Chinese legend LGL, (speed, and great serve), I can say LGY is more talented. Achievement? not even close.
After a few well known mental breakdowns in big games against non-Chinese, usually very unforgiving Chinese coaches showed extraordinary patience and kept him in the roster and continued giving him the opportunity after opportunity. One of reasons is the rare talent they saw in him. It's hard to give up someone that talented.
But, it's the time he has finally spotted the sunset.
I don't think anyone will dispute that he is not an all-time great by Chinese team standards. But great by table tennis standards? Absolutely.Been in the CNT for so many years just shows he is tremendously talented (speed, quickness, let alone unique great backhand, traits natural and hard to train), no one can deny that. Talent alone doesn't define greatness, but overall achievement does, for Chinese, which is big stage international competitions. Compared to his teammates of similar talent level, he falls really short. Worse, people usually remember his big game failures, which he has plenty, that's just part of human nature.
Compare him to a Chinese legend LGL, (speed, and great serve), I can say LGY is more talented. Achievement? not even close.
After a few well known mental breakdowns in big games against non-Chinese, usually very unforgiving Chinese coaches showed extraordinary patience and kept him in the roster and continued giving him the opportunity after opportunity. One of reasons is the rare talent they saw in him. It's hard to give up someone that talented.
But, it's the time he has finally spotted the sunset.
Remember LGY is in the top tier Chinese team for many years. The Judging criterion for Chinese is different and unique. H2H winning just means he is high level player and very talented. To be a great for Chinese, you need medals, medals heavy and many.I don't think anyone will dispute that he is not an all-time great by Chinese team standards. But great by table tennis standards? Absolutely.
He was kept in the roster because he still proved he was the next-best after the GOATs and nobody convincingly seized his position for many years, not simply because he was a raw talent that didn't frequently deliver against the best in the world.
As for achievement:
6-1 lifetime H2H against Dima
3-3 against Boll
4-1 against Mizutani
8-3 against Niwa
3-3 against Xu Xin
5-7 against FZD excluding WJTTC and T2 Diamond
This track record doesn't make you great?