says
anybody seen my backhand?
says
anybody seen my backhand?
Member
so, a little bit of food for thought. I got this question while reading one of the threads on this forum, where statement was made by @WingTT :
It's hard to generalise rubbers based on generation but the trend is toward harder rubbers. The only advantage older rubbers have is maybe price and familiarity if you're used to a particular rubber and want to stick to it. There is a good reason why harder rubbers are getting more popular, it's because they really do work better with the plastic ball.
when I started playing table tennis, there was not much choice. everyone basically had Butterfly Sriver rubbers, better players had Yasaka Mark V. later on speed-glue joined the chat, Sriver FX came into play for me, Mark V came into play ... and we used that speed-glue for one purpose only - to get softer rubbers ... then Ekrips came, the original Bryce (not the hyperspeed version like today), but speed-glue was important factor to the game. when I stopped playing, tensor rubbers came to play. Tenergy, Rakza ... soft rubbers. even though we already had one big change in game - matchplay was shortened into 11 point games and ball got bigger.
fast forward 10-15 years. no more celluloid. plastic ball. still same size (sort of) - DHS Hurricane. Butterfly Dignics 9c, Donic BlueGrip C1 ... all hard rubbers. most of top players are playing with hard rubber. even I went with the trend, tried BlueGrip C1, but went back to softer rubber. went to completely plasticball setup with the newest tech (at least on forehand and blade-wise, backhand was still soft) ... while I liked the Omega VII China Guang there was something missing and I started craving for softer rubber again.
I know I am not on international level, but I do play decent table tennis, still. when playing against younger players, who are either still competing or recently retired players, I can keep up with them, sometimes I even win. they are playing with harder setups, at least on forehand.
so, is the trend of harder rubber really just a hype? i.e., if you enter a match on the highest level with soft(ish) rubbers on your blade against the trendy hightech hard(er) rubbers, are you handicapped?
and to finish with - why is hard(er) rubber so much better for modern plastic ball?
It's hard to generalise rubbers based on generation but the trend is toward harder rubbers. The only advantage older rubbers have is maybe price and familiarity if you're used to a particular rubber and want to stick to it. There is a good reason why harder rubbers are getting more popular, it's because they really do work better with the plastic ball.
when I started playing table tennis, there was not much choice. everyone basically had Butterfly Sriver rubbers, better players had Yasaka Mark V. later on speed-glue joined the chat, Sriver FX came into play for me, Mark V came into play ... and we used that speed-glue for one purpose only - to get softer rubbers ... then Ekrips came, the original Bryce (not the hyperspeed version like today), but speed-glue was important factor to the game. when I stopped playing, tensor rubbers came to play. Tenergy, Rakza ... soft rubbers. even though we already had one big change in game - matchplay was shortened into 11 point games and ball got bigger.
fast forward 10-15 years. no more celluloid. plastic ball. still same size (sort of) - DHS Hurricane. Butterfly Dignics 9c, Donic BlueGrip C1 ... all hard rubbers. most of top players are playing with hard rubber. even I went with the trend, tried BlueGrip C1, but went back to softer rubber. went to completely plasticball setup with the newest tech (at least on forehand and blade-wise, backhand was still soft) ... while I liked the Omega VII China Guang there was something missing and I started craving for softer rubber again.
I know I am not on international level, but I do play decent table tennis, still. when playing against younger players, who are either still competing or recently retired players, I can keep up with them, sometimes I even win. they are playing with harder setups, at least on forehand.
so, is the trend of harder rubber really just a hype? i.e., if you enter a match on the highest level with soft(ish) rubbers on your blade against the trendy hightech hard(er) rubbers, are you handicapped?
and to finish with - why is hard(er) rubber so much better for modern plastic ball?