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Yes precisely i can tell you are kinda just winging it rather than having a precise read of the ball spin, and then precisely aiming for and brushing a specific point of the ball and in a specific direction (hook, straight or fade) to ride the incoming sidespin. Without doing this it is very difficult to have 80% or better success rates when directly looping long serves. This is why I recommend just having someone serve long to you with 1 particular spin out of the 7 spin types and then you loop it (pushing is illegal in this exercise). You only pass when you can get 80+% success rates with this exercise. Also when you do it correctly it should feel easy to you. After mastering one spin type move to the other, and then ask your partner to mix it up.I actually have a hard time memorizing the serves spin and how I hit the ball. Sometimes I hit the ball perfect and I couldn´t explain you what the incoming spin exactly was other than the sidespin if it had one. I also couldn´t tell you how my stroke looked like. This happens a lot to me except against long backspin balls. There I know how I exactly hit the ball and can mostly tell how much backspin it had (thats why I am more confident against those balls now) But as you can see I rarely get long pushes to my FH. They all start with some sort of sidebackspin or sidetopspin and mostly to my middle or backhand all of them being more long than short.
Once I am in the actual rally in the middistance I feel very comfortable bringing the ball back to the table.
Rally balls are not so complicated because they are mostly topspin of various degrees.
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