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Hav you tried the Xiom Hayabusa ZL Pro? It is basically the HAL, but the inner fibre instead of outer. Same speed, but more flexible and more hold. Reason asking is I have the HAL, it’s probably a tad fast for me but I really like the feel and the handle (more than the Persson Powerplay).A couple thoughts here
- First, before giving proper accurate advice it would be good to see your technique in action, to see if you can hit through the sponge or not by hearing contact sound and checking blade angle. A harder sponge if you can't hit-brush through it is going to be more difficult to play. Also, the Hugo HAL is a 'viscaria-like' blade that uses a 'sort of carbon' (no real carbon) and ayous (instead of ALC + limba) to be more tamed, but it's still an outer koto blade, which paired with something like t80 becomes hard to use and d05 is more controlled in slow strokes but when activated has a significant catapult. I think this is what you mean with suppressed feeling? That you are forced to break to keep balls on the table? I have mentioned this issue in detail here: https://www.tabletennisdaily.com/fo...ower-really-comes-from-in-table-tennis.38784/
- Then about the choice of rubber, if you like a catapult linear tensor, then G-1 is your best alternative as @piligrim and @golden_son mentioned. It is not a slow rubber though, linear does not mean slow. I agree that Razka 7 is slower and more controlled than G-1, having tried both on different blades. If you hit through, G-1 has more tempo and spin. If G1 is too much, Razka 7 is good too, glayzer too but glayzer has more catapult built in due to butterfly sponges, so it's not as linear.
- Last thought: If technique needs improvement and is still developing, the hugo HAL is not the right blade for you, and D05 not the right rubber![]()