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The 18y old did it consistently I was going nuts out of 20TS he hit like 18. It was closer to the table the same distance you saw me doing that drill with the grandpa. Maybe even closer than that. He has shorter arms and legs maybe thats why it works better for him.I have tried to explain this before but you don't believe me. Those are high risk topspins that require perfect timing to execute. No one plays such topspin all the time even professionals. They happen when you time the forward motion and the upward follow through relatively perfectly qith the incoming ball and they won't get the ball on the table all the time and they won't be great when tou are further from the table. Trying to belive you can consistently produce them is IMHO a fool's errand but I can be wrong, keep trying to get them if you think you can time the ball perfectly all the time and can find the right timing read the ball perfectly enough to make it work.
The thing about the 18 year old os that hr is not a world champion. You dont have footage of the match but the truth is that in reality, most players look good when you don't know how to defuse them. A player can look good hitting topspins on balls that are float, or can have a serve strategy that relies upon him getting balls that in a certain range or in certain positions ans you juat dont have the skill level currently to decommissioned them. But as your serve receive game expands, you start realizing that if you just flicked the ball or pushed the ball with sidespin or moved them to the wide forehand, their play would fall apart.
Moreover you unfortunately don't have a higher quality player to play against but it is not a bad idea to train against players who are attacking you hard and you learn to block as close to the table as you can (if i remember you back up a lot and give the opponent time with yoir defense). If you learn to block one powerful shot, then the opponent has to recover and hit two or three and then some od that power is contained.
In any case, table tennis is a very mental game and I have learned while playing it that defining any problem you have in a way that yields no solution will stagnate your game. If your opponent was 2200, then what you are saying is understandable. But if your opponent is 1500 like you, he is a good player, but he has weaknesses, you couldn't find them but they are there, in a few years you might play him again and things you couldn't do then, you might be able to do and see that things were not what you thought when you first played him. He exployed your movement but maybe it was because you couldn't frustrate his anticipation. And you do like to back off the table but from being back you dont use your extra time to increase your quality and variety. More time should mean more spin but you go for more speed which is the first thing the ball will lose when it hits the table.
For me, I have played long enough to know the strengths and weakness of my game and to accept certain things. So when I play an opponent, my goal is to put in enough effort that they have to earn victory. I am looking for where they like the ball, trying to find serve and return that works for me, testing whether they read push vs float etc. Do they move well when pulled wide? If I serve fast and long into the wide backhand, do they have the skill to spin that ball? If they push every time back to my backhand I have an attack. Ig they push long every time, I have an attack. If they serve long where are they waiting for the ball. If they serve long, I back off the able a little give myself time to attack any long ball and challenge them to serve short.
Having a good forehand is cool but it is not table tennis!
No he is definetly beatable otherwise he would have won in the A event. but coming really close to a 1800 rated player is insane as a 1490 player. Losing 3 sets in the deuce. After beating a 1650 aswell with the same strategy as against me. I wish I had footage but even if I had a tripod there we played very close to the wall and the tables didnt even have a barrier in between so no way to put it somewhere. Only way was getting someone to film with a phone.
Also feels awkward being the only one filming himself with a tripod in a tournament setting.
I do agree I didn't know how to defuse him since I was already struggeling to get into the controlled half distance game after his serve. He served 90% long forcing me to open up and then wait for a weak drive by me and then clap with his fh. His bh and fh blocks were very stable as I said taking it very early aswell giving me less time and forcing me to move into the balls. Anyway enough said about that game.
I actually have video footage of him when I beat him previous time in league game which was over a year ago. It was 3-2 for me. since then he was injured for a year (wrist) plays only league games same amount as me doesnt train and beats me 3-1..
I agree I didn't make him guess too much about my placement. He seemed to know where I am gonna place the balls. It feels like I have to use up all my energy to play "optimal" but I can't hold that level. Be it concentration be it staying lower and having the attacking mindset. It's just a short burst of energy I can't hold for longer time. Even against the 1650. I was 0-6 behind told myself wtf is this shiet focus. Then I focused was super aggressive and got to 6-6. So I know I can do it but then my energy gets to 0 again. Yes I was already 12h into the tournament but still. This stems from not training hard enough I think. I need to find ways for me to push myself even harder even vs weaker opponents.
No because I am just too slow in the brain. I am good at reacting just with the hand (blocks) but not good enough to also play quality active strokes. I have to move - stop - backstroke - calculate the swing path and racket angle - calculate the timing when to hit and just have a non wobbly stroke calculating also how much forwards I can go. And then realize you have no time and just do a shiet stroke anyway. I would prob need a fast multiball session to get used to it. But thats a different issue. *Right now I want to tackle my fh topspin technique and then work to achieve the same result by being forced to move around.And you do like to back off the table but from being back you dont use your extra time to increase your quality and variety.
This is why I was asking for hard drills but easy to play with those types of players.
I will also try to use the roboter more even though its annoying to set it up for just 1,5h training session. It's quite boring compared to training with real players. But its also annoying if you cant drill for 4-5 balls with your partner.
I also messaged this other 1700 player who wanted to train with me since 2 months ago. Last time he said early january since he is also looking for a partner. But lets see how he is gonna reply for this week.
This is what I lack aswell. Even though I absorb some information when playing I am not aware of all those things. It would blow my mind to think and memorize all that during the set and then changing your strategy or abuse something. A coach would come in handy in these cases. I just had never a really useful outside perspective except for them telling me to stay close to the table and some motivating words. Or simple stuff like don't play to his fh keep him at his bh. Noone has a clue tbh. Even when I am the outside perspective it's hard to coach someone because their ability is very limited. Hard to tell someone to loop parallel when they can't do it for example.For me, I have played long enough to know the strengths and weakness of my game and to accept certain things. So when I play an opponent, my goal is to put in enough effort that they have to earn victory. I am looking for where they like the ball, trying to find serve and return that works for me, testing whether they read push vs float etc. Do they move well when pulled wide? If I serve fast and long into the wide backhand, do they have the skill to spin that ball? If they push every time back to my backhand I have an attack. Ig they push long every time, I have an attack. If they serve long where are they waiting for the ball. If they serve long, I back off the able a little give myself time to attack any long ball and challenge them to serve short.
Having a good forehand is cool but it is not table tennis!
When it comes to me I can do different stuff. I am very versatile. If they remind me or give a suggesting like serve this and then push hard to xy I would be glad and be like oh yeah sure I can try that. Right now the only thing I was thinking about was hit the ball in front of me and keep arm and hand relaxed.
Maybe there is a youtube channel that talks about that stuff I can slowly learn from?
Otherwise I think I had started a book 4years ago but I switched to youtube videos and had no time to read a book aswell. Now I could start reading it again. Was it "table tennis for thinkers" or something from timo boll I don't remember need to check it out.
You are right that the fh is not everything. But even I admit to myself I don't use it as much and it's just too slow most of the times.
I want my fh to be my weapon and want to work on it. It's gonna be a long process. But once I get it I will be glad to put these hours to have developed it.