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Sorry for hijacking your thread, but as a person who is ambidexterous I really think it is so cool to be able to play with both hands, and i couldnt resist to blast some of the haters.If anything, I am more undecided than before. I was deciding between (1) Using either left or right arm to (2) Switch hands during or after point and now I have (3) Holding a racket in each hand
Personally I think 2) is suboptimal because the switching speed is way too slow for TT. 1) and 3) are not in conflict, they all involve similar skillsets. I can do all 3 types of playstyle and they are not in conflict: 1) right hand only. 2) left hand only. 3) both hands. In particular you need a lot of training for 2) if you ever want to master 3)
So for me obviously 1 is actually the strongest, followed by 3 and then 2 is the weakest, but it is OK since I dont spend so much time training my left hand.
One thing to note is that with your right hand FH, you might want to consider 'easier' materials to play with for eg anti or pips which will aggravate the shoulder less. For left hand FH either you have to train it more or you can also shortcut a bit and use anti or pips. The idea is to gain an advantage with the variation (using anti/pips) then finish off the point with your inverted side. The limit is really your imagination.