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In my club, there is one new guy who never plays matches. He doesn't talk to anyone, so I don't really know him. He looks new to the game. He brings his own robot to practice and seems serious to learn. But for at least a couple months, he only trains looping with another guy who never plays a game either. He can loop consistently now. If his goal is just to hit around and have fun, he's got it. But if he wants to learn and improve, his techniques are quite inefficient - little body movement, arm swing too big. And he has not touch serve, return, short game, etc.
I wanted to tell him that he's doing many things incorrectly and he should start working on other things than just looping. But then his partner was kind of coaching and training him, so I kept my mouth shut. When you see other people's bad techniques, do you voluntarily give advices and teach? Especially when someone else is already coaching him? I rarely give advices because I am not a coach and not a top player, but this one makes me feel bad because the harder he works, the deeper the bad habits stay.
I wanted to tell him that he's doing many things incorrectly and he should start working on other things than just looping. But then his partner was kind of coaching and training him, so I kept my mouth shut. When you see other people's bad techniques, do you voluntarily give advices and teach? Especially when someone else is already coaching him? I rarely give advices because I am not a coach and not a top player, but this one makes me feel bad because the harder he works, the deeper the bad habits stay.