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I believe it was Schlager actually who advised to start with the rubber that you intend to use once you reach higher levels, i.e. don't start on junk like Sriver, but starting on a slower blade and that incrementing that as you improve.This is really a matter of framing and judging using standards that do not promote adaptation. I had a coach once tell me to push topspin serves into the net and push backspin serves off the table. He believed doing this would encourage me to understand my ball control and strokes better. It might not work for everyone, but for me, it changed the way I approached and played and trained table tennis. I stopped being so focused on getting it right immediately and gave myself time to adapt to anything I faced anew. I stopped focusing on looping the ball on the table every time and played around with varying aspects of my topspins and learning how they affected the ball.
In the infamous words of Werner Schlager, you want the player to make as few adjustments as possible as instincts are hard to break. To have them adapt to one thing (rubbers that are not designed to spin the ball forward) and then adapt to another (rubbers designed to spin the ball forward) can affect their hitting, pushing and blocking instincts. So the sooner you can get them to what promotes the instincts you expect them to keep and optimize, the better.