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Greetings,
I have three blades which were made-up back in 2008 - the last time I played.
They are a Stiga All-Round Classic {ALL} with worn-out Donic JO Waldner rubbers, a Stiga Energy Wood WRB (OFF-) with unused/protected Donic Coppa Tagora, and a Stiga Clipper Wood WRB (OFF) with unused/protected Donic Supersonic S40.
I normally transition through the three bats during a season rather than buy new rubbers for the same bat - this way I can play myself back into form with the Stiga ARC, then use the Energy WRB when my technique is grooved, and finally use the Classic WRB towards the end of the season as my confidence in my form is at its highest.
I can still keep the Energy and Clipper woods for later in the season as the rubbers on them are still as new - I just need new rubbers for the Stiga ARC, as I used them at the start of the 2008 season before returning to Ireland from the UK.
Given the cost of the best rubbers these days, I'm only looking for mid-price rubbers - Mark V and variants, Vari Spin D.TecS, Sriver and variants, Bryce, etc.
I'm a looper normally off both wings. I prefer rubbers particularly for spin serves on the forehand, and rubbers for returning spin serves on the backhand.
Forehand
1) Spin serves;
2) Control-spin attack and hits (smash, drives, etc);
3) Touch-play.
Backhand
1} Return short spin serves (flick, push, touch-play);
2) Fast top-spin attack, (counter-)hitting, blocks, etc.
As an interesting aside, at least to the science-oriented like myself, I came across a couple of articles on blades and tacky rubbers. The author's take-aways on both included the following:
Any suggestinos from loopers with experience of the above listed rubbers or others would be of interest.
Kindest regards,
James
I have three blades which were made-up back in 2008 - the last time I played.
They are a Stiga All-Round Classic {ALL} with worn-out Donic JO Waldner rubbers, a Stiga Energy Wood WRB (OFF-) with unused/protected Donic Coppa Tagora, and a Stiga Clipper Wood WRB (OFF) with unused/protected Donic Supersonic S40.
I normally transition through the three bats during a season rather than buy new rubbers for the same bat - this way I can play myself back into form with the Stiga ARC, then use the Energy WRB when my technique is grooved, and finally use the Classic WRB towards the end of the season as my confidence in my form is at its highest.
I can still keep the Energy and Clipper woods for later in the season as the rubbers on them are still as new - I just need new rubbers for the Stiga ARC, as I used them at the start of the 2008 season before returning to Ireland from the UK.
Given the cost of the best rubbers these days, I'm only looking for mid-price rubbers - Mark V and variants, Vari Spin D.TecS, Sriver and variants, Bryce, etc.
I'm a looper normally off both wings. I prefer rubbers particularly for spin serves on the forehand, and rubbers for returning spin serves on the backhand.
Forehand
1) Spin serves;
2) Control-spin attack and hits (smash, drives, etc);
3) Touch-play.
Backhand
1} Return short spin serves (flick, push, touch-play);
2) Fast top-spin attack, (counter-)hitting, blocks, etc.
As an interesting aside, at least to the science-oriented like myself, I came across a couple of articles on blades and tacky rubbers. The author's take-aways on both included the following:
A beginner should start with an all-round blade ( early catapult effect ) and at least medium to medium-hard rubbers. The forehand should be harder than the backhand and the max sponge thickness should be used.
If he gets better, an off- blade ( medium late catapult effect ) and even harder rubbers can be used. Pay attention that you don’t stick to your medium rubber on the backhand side if you “upgrade” your blade, because this combination might be hard to control. In this case, upgrade the backhand rubber to medium-hard as well.
I used to use Chinese sticky and Japanese tacky rubbers but moved from them to the normal rubbers. I'd prefer Tensor-type rubbers for spin serves and looping. The articles suggest using medium hardness sponges of maximum thickness with a flexible blade, which is what the Stiga ARC would be. Hence the VariSpin would be interesting - the only issue being its soft sponge, which might be compensated for by using maximum thickness.Hence the recommendation to use nontacky rubbers for amateurs, nontacky rubbers for intermediate players with the option to upgrade to a tacky forehand as a long term investment and finally the tacky forehand plus nontacky backhand combination of (semi-) professional players.
Any suggestinos from loopers with experience of the above listed rubbers or others would be of interest.
Kindest regards,
James
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