says
Shoo...nothing to see here. - zeio
says
Shoo...nothing to see here. - zeio
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As I noted in the thought experiment with NextLevel, Harimoto was an unknown (not equivalent to weakest but a volatile variable) because of that match with DHK at WTTC 2024, and between Hayata and Hirano, the latter was still the more reliable player given the history of the former. That mentality was well reflected in the 5ch comments after Harimoto got creamed, and you could literally feel the folks there were in panic when they realized ONCE AGAIN Hirano was the only one they could rely on and how Hayata's selfishness led the team to that situation.I think she's weakest in the Olympic context. Her technical skills may have surpassed Hirano but based on her post match interview where she said she felt 'nothing but relief' it seems that she still can't handle the pressure. My feeling is that Hirano and Hayata would have at least found a way to make that match against Kaufmann competitive.
For Kaufmann, Hayata, notwithstanding her injury, would have a harder time than Hirano because of you-know-the-word. Hayata's record against lefties was not that good in her junior days. Look up their H2Hs with JJH, despite the same number of wins and losses, Hirano's losses were always close.
https://web.archive.org/web/2024012...3043416426&w=3VVHb863ae50cMcFBrWyn563dBYXp3v2
Hirano 0-1 -> 3-1 -> 4-2 Kaufmann
Harder than expected. Hirano turned to the shovel backspin serve and played tried-and-tested 防反/defense-counter after losing more in the topspin rallies and Kaufmann couldn't read that well.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgoEpsAQOaM