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Here's a recent video of me playing in a tournament. I am not happy with my lack of performance
I feel I was very slow to react especially on the wide FH and made an incredible number of receive miss.
It was the first match of the day on a Sunday morning and we have very little warmup. I hate this...
...
https://youtu.be/jJ07Qb3u5aU
Videos of my practice yesterday.
1. Forehand
2. Backhand
3. Backhand punch cross court and down the line
4. Forehand and backhand at backhand corner
5. Alternate forehand and backhand
Any advice / suggestion welcomed!![]()
So at the club last night, one of the other left-handed players was there, and we got to do some lefty-to-lefty forehand rallies!
I also asked to drill, trying to loop long backspin serves from below the table. He has this shot consistent, I struggle a lot. Then I decided to try and put in more effort, and did a big grunt "HUH!" as I hit, and did a perfect loop! So I reckon adding the grunt when doing this shot could be important for me haha.
hey guys I’m training today and tomorrow there is a match any tips.Im vsing a 117 ranked player and I’m 711.Any training tips for today
Thanks for the input Songdavid and OSP!
Perhaps because I have practiced serving all of a sudden in 2 consecutive days, I must have injured my back shoulder muscles, it is restricting my shoulder movement at the moment. I will probably not practice serving until it is settled down.
I will update you guys on my progress! From what I understand from songdavid, when I do the serve, my bat needs to go downward as it contacts the ball so the ball does not bounce up. I also need to practice so that the first bounce of the serve is consistent in the middle of the table and not so close to the net.
Ironically, I impact the ball at a significantly higher height than many players and still manage good short serves. I may also experiment with the concept and approach David S. is showing.
One thing regardless is LOOSE grip during swing and impact, near impossible to get great spin and short control tightening up.
Many factors involved to get it all together and many try to practice getting them right all at the same time and often, it doesn't come together anytime soon.
Another approach is to isolate segments of the serve, like ball toss, short swing, timing to impact, first bounce, bat angles... then later put them together. Any of these not right will make a missed or poor quality serve.
Sir,
Do whatever it takes to help your game ... of course, within the rules of the game too.
~osph
Most experienced players already do the things I mentioned without thinking about it. Since I spend a lot of time serving and experimenting with my serves, I've become aware of it. Of course, you can do it with just your wrist.
Isolating parts of the serve is great for analysis and testing; I do it myself when I want to learn new serves and/or makes serves better, although I focus more on the physical aspects and how they affect the serve. Like elbow placement, location and direction of contact in reference to your body, and racket speed.
Hit for 3 hours with 5 different partners ...
whoa this is a family friendly forum!