Btw: NextLevel's technique of using video to analyze what he needs to work on is a really great idea.
Sent from TheDepthsOfTartarus via TheHouseOfHades
You don't always need video to do it, though video can help because your view can be colored by subjective pressures during the match. My favorite example of this was playing a guy who liked to play me a lot because I always struggled with his serves. One match, he beat me 3-0 and I struggled with his serves. Before reviewing the match, I thought I had the whole story and that I needed to just return his serves better. But when I watched the match, I realized that after the first game and a half or so, I did start returning his serves better. What I did that really caused the problem was that I let the struggle with his serve influence my mood about how to play on my serve, so I was costing myself points.
Then I watched a couple of other players play him at other events and they all struggled within reason for their level for the first game, but as the match went on, they dominated him because they got better at returning his serve (one even won the last game 11-0).
So when I faced him in a rematch, I lost the first game. But at this point, I didn't even lose any sleep over it, because I knew I would get better at doing that as the match went on. And even in the 4th game, I was down 4-8 and came back to win that game and the match 3-1 because I realized that I just had to accept the struggles on his serve, but play the points on mine competently.
Without video, if a friend/coach is watching, or if you remember what you struggled with, that can always help. Points tend to have similar patterns. But like I said, you run the risk of subjective bias and can't as easily re-frame the experience in your head like I did if necessary. We also all run the risk of visualizing ourselves in our heads differently from how we actually played. In my head, Ma Long is looping when I play, but when I watch myself, I wonder who this old man with jacked up knees running around like a headless chicken is.
But it's par for the course - I am sure Ma Long feels that way when he watches himself play sometimes. And if not, he will do so in a few years. That's why I love this game.