says
Fair Play First
Q) -- Which materials deserve the name of junk in context of the rules of the game.?
A) -- Any racket material that is gonna to cause player's racket unplayable should be treated as junky, substandard stuff.
this is the 3rd or 4th time igor has post the same nonsense in side the past 3 months
he should be banned for spamming the forum
Or you can try to get good and stop crying? Ever thought of that?
Many cried foul when Waldemar Fritz appeared with a sponged racket in 1951. Shortly after, Satoh swept the world championship using a sponged bat. Foul! Toxic! Sponge rackets were banned (in 1959), but that didn't make the sponge abomination go away. Instead, it lead to sandwich rackets, with sponge covered by a layer of pimpled rubber.
Toxic, foul, and yet: the mainstay of racket coverings to this day.
Pimples in, out, in various geometries, diameter, shape, length: variety is the spice of life. Some pimples out rubbers are grippy, some more than others and some less; and some are tacky, some more and some less so.
Variety is the spice of life. And in TT, it takes skill to wield any bat competently. Nothing's a free ticket to dominating gameplay, and all styles are valid.
Don't complain about toxic rubbers. That just means you've rusted into a few fixed game patterns. Pimples out, like any other racket coverings, have their liabilities as well as their strenghts. It's your skill that matters, not the material.
Couldn't help myself, it's too tempting!Is solid enough.
Couldn't help myself, it's too tempting!
You'd think that's obvious, but apparently not to Igor.Your post was 1000% on point. And when someone can't handle playing against something like LP and want everyone to play with the equipment they choose, it is worth pointing out, the flaw is in the skills of the player who can't handle LP. Not the LP player or the equipment.