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had two revealations in todays trainings. First was me playing against somebody who played much in the youth and now with 50 returns to the sport (she is actually already playing for 4 or 5 month again) and one can see how many things are intuitive to her. He can hold herself in most rallys if there is not too much spin.
My main serve (long backspin to the opponents backhand) is a construction site if somebody returns it diagonally to my backhand. I can forehand loop it, but i am just so used to it that i am totally out of position if somebody blocks it down the line after than. This is why i want to get acustomed to backhand loop it. I have trouble doing the backhand loop because i instinctly go back from the table and have the right foot a little forward expecting the ball and in 50% of the cases the ball drops earlier than i expect and i miss. I think i go back from the table instinctively to have more room and not to blast me wrist against the table when trying to do a more forward swing. Now i tried to simply expect anything coming to the backhand to be too short to loop and flick it with the backhand. This worked very well and even when it was longer i could backhand flick the ball without risking breaking my wrist
The second revelation was playing against an old guy with long pips. to be honest anytime he asks if i wanna play a match against him i sigh and just do it to get it over with. I just felt that there is no point for me to find a strategy against long pips if my regular opponents only rarely use long pips effectively. Today i even asked that guy to play a match because i wanted to test a theory. That theory came from me playing against a younger dude that wanted to change to long pips on the backhand and i played him a few days ago. It was a nice introduction to a not skilled long pips player and i grew in confidence attacking his balls.
I did a long backspin serve, sometimes even heavy backspin ball to his backhand where the long pips were. He did his backhand long pips block which made the ball come back with slight topspin (but shorter than one would expect) i had that in mind stayed close and just counter looped it. My counter loops where not very dangerous because they were quite high, but aiming at the middle (basically his elbow) forced him to quite some errors. Now i even look forward to playing against long pips, because it is very consistent what comes back and it is always attackable, because it is topspin. Once i even simply smashed his return. This really changes my mindset and i am not afraid of playing against long pips anymore.
it's not like i won against that longpips old guy but the mere fact that i looped many of his returns made him insecure and try to return the ball lower which netted quite a few points for me when he played my not really spinny serve into the net. Of course i dont have it right when the rally is longer and i don't focus on what side he played the ball with, but it is a encouraging start for me. I always felt that if you don't do the first silly mistake against long pips players in the lower leagues often enough they don't have much clue about what to do when their odd balls come back either.
this realization made me brave enough to even attempt to smash his returns, because they were topspin and i would not really risk it hitting the net.
My main serve (long backspin to the opponents backhand) is a construction site if somebody returns it diagonally to my backhand. I can forehand loop it, but i am just so used to it that i am totally out of position if somebody blocks it down the line after than. This is why i want to get acustomed to backhand loop it. I have trouble doing the backhand loop because i instinctly go back from the table and have the right foot a little forward expecting the ball and in 50% of the cases the ball drops earlier than i expect and i miss. I think i go back from the table instinctively to have more room and not to blast me wrist against the table when trying to do a more forward swing. Now i tried to simply expect anything coming to the backhand to be too short to loop and flick it with the backhand. This worked very well and even when it was longer i could backhand flick the ball without risking breaking my wrist
The second revelation was playing against an old guy with long pips. to be honest anytime he asks if i wanna play a match against him i sigh and just do it to get it over with. I just felt that there is no point for me to find a strategy against long pips if my regular opponents only rarely use long pips effectively. Today i even asked that guy to play a match because i wanted to test a theory. That theory came from me playing against a younger dude that wanted to change to long pips on the backhand and i played him a few days ago. It was a nice introduction to a not skilled long pips player and i grew in confidence attacking his balls.
I did a long backspin serve, sometimes even heavy backspin ball to his backhand where the long pips were. He did his backhand long pips block which made the ball come back with slight topspin (but shorter than one would expect) i had that in mind stayed close and just counter looped it. My counter loops where not very dangerous because they were quite high, but aiming at the middle (basically his elbow) forced him to quite some errors. Now i even look forward to playing against long pips, because it is very consistent what comes back and it is always attackable, because it is topspin. Once i even simply smashed his return. This really changes my mindset and i am not afraid of playing against long pips anymore.
it's not like i won against that longpips old guy but the mere fact that i looped many of his returns made him insecure and try to return the ball lower which netted quite a few points for me when he played my not really spinny serve into the net. Of course i dont have it right when the rally is longer and i don't focus on what side he played the ball with, but it is a encouraging start for me. I always felt that if you don't do the first silly mistake against long pips players in the lower leagues often enough they don't have much clue about what to do when their odd balls come back either.
this realization made me brave enough to even attempt to smash his returns, because they were topspin and i would not really risk it hitting the net.
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