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Yeah against the lefty, I wouldn't worry too much about the sidespin on his serve for now... it's more important to keep your returns from popping up, which means being able to pick the backspin vs topspin. Against his topspin, you could keep things simple and control drive it back, or if you have the confidence, hit a stronger loopdrive. Against his backspin you can loop it if you want, but you probably don't need to do it all the time if you're not comfortable. If you push it low, it still doesn't give him the height to slap it. His forehand can hit some dangerous loops vs backspin, but there's a lot of arm going on, and is pretty unstable, so if you're going to push anywhere, it'd be at his elbow or occasionally at his forehand.Against the lefty:
As you analyzed I was struggeling mainly when he was serving. My entire brainpower was used on the first return ball. I then had nothing left for the upcoming (block) to keep attacking. But thats a big me problem. I also can´t really practise those serves and I know for a long time I struggle with these serves. Noone in my club does the, I also have no roboter.. Is there an easier way to loop this? Should I ignore the sidespin and just focus on how much backspin/topspin it has and just loop at the back of the ball instead of from the side? I think with my Forehand I tend to hit the ball from the right side more.
This is where variety and deception in your serve plays its part. If you can disguise topspin, backspin, and (the very underrated) no spin serves, he won't be able to consistently get a read on hitting a strong push. And if you add some speed and depth variety, this should also help.This game was a lot of confidence Issue on the receive for me aswell. I could serve short to him which I did a couple of times. But I felt like it was very risky when he cuts the ball heavy and even if its half long, he would force me to push back and he starts attacking. So I had to find something where I know I get a long push back or a weak loop that I can block. I also see now that I was too far away from the table to loop.
I think experience and knowing your game plays a big part. The lefty had an obvious gameplan to hit deceptive serves to try and get high balls to attack, and on serve receive he attacked just about everything long. That means he's able to dictate the play, so he'll know what balls will come back to him, which buys him more time.The thing is something is fundamentally flawed in my game. Because my opponents are not the fittest or players that move a lot according to the ball. Yet they hit those balls. Meanwhile I have to get "specific" balls to attack. Not sure how to explain this better. It just felt like that they moved on standby mode.
When Dominik is receiving serve, it looks like he's impatiently waiting in a queue at McDonalds lol. But despite his demeanour, and that he stands up straight and looks like he's always on his heels, he's actually a pretty decent mover. He moves well enough that he's almost always in position to hit a controlled shot. He also has a really good feel for the ball, where all his shots look controlled (if not aesthetically pleasing).This game I don´t blame my setup or anything. It was more that 3rd game. You will see what I mean by that (vs Dominik) Just feels bad losing to someone who doesnt really topspin and just blocks and smashes.
Dominik also has a very simple gameplan: he rallies until you give him enough height to smash. So here's a few things you can work on:
1) Keep improving the quality of your shots: okay this sounds like I'm saying "git gud", but Dominik feeds off tentative shots. So if you can be more proactive against his blocks, this will put him under a bit more pressure. His blocks are okay, but all of them are attackable once you feel comfortable with your game. Your forehand is a bit more proactive, but your backhand is too tentative, and sometimes you just put the ball there for him to hit.
2) Work with depth: Dominik moves well laterally, so try and get him to change between moving closer to the table, and going further back away from the table. One way to do this is to serve short and wide, then hit the third ball deep in the opposite direction. Or hitting stronger shots that force him back. He looked much more uncomfortable when he had to move forward and backward.
No shame in losing to someone like Dominik though, he's obviously honed his own style over the years that works for him.