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Hello Friends!
Ive been thinking lately a lot about the legends from the past, their success, and how the game was rolling back in their days of glory.
and I found the qouestion I have asked myself to be very hard to determined:
What if players like Liu Guolliang, Jan Waldner, Kong Linghui or others legendery players from the past were start playing 30 years later than the point their career was originally started?
The game has defenetly changed! we all can agree on that one.
So do you think those legend could still hold up their game (each one with his own special abillities and advantages) and adapt the change in the rules, the change of the rubbers (tension, hardness, explosivness, speed and spin) and all of the other chnges that were made in the past 10 years? plastic balls, 11 points per set- we can keep counting them all day.
In my opinion, players like Waldner, which had back in the days THE BEST touch ever to be displayed by a table tennis player (once again, in my opinion), players like him wouldnt be able to perform the same touch they did back there, in nowadays: the game is way more spinny today, way more tense and definetly more explosive. so I dont think they could produced the same faboulous shots that made them so famous back then - In our time.
But it is definetly possible they could adapted and developed different and even better skills than they have ever had!
I found this debate to be very interesting.
As usual, have a great discussion! really looking forward to hear your thoughts on that one.
Ive been thinking lately a lot about the legends from the past, their success, and how the game was rolling back in their days of glory.
and I found the qouestion I have asked myself to be very hard to determined:
What if players like Liu Guolliang, Jan Waldner, Kong Linghui or others legendery players from the past were start playing 30 years later than the point their career was originally started?
The game has defenetly changed! we all can agree on that one.
So do you think those legend could still hold up their game (each one with his own special abillities and advantages) and adapt the change in the rules, the change of the rubbers (tension, hardness, explosivness, speed and spin) and all of the other chnges that were made in the past 10 years? plastic balls, 11 points per set- we can keep counting them all day.
In my opinion, players like Waldner, which had back in the days THE BEST touch ever to be displayed by a table tennis player (once again, in my opinion), players like him wouldnt be able to perform the same touch they did back there, in nowadays: the game is way more spinny today, way more tense and definetly more explosive. so I dont think they could produced the same faboulous shots that made them so famous back then - In our time.
But it is definetly possible they could adapted and developed different and even better skills than they have ever had!
I found this debate to be very interesting.
As usual, have a great discussion! really looking forward to hear your thoughts on that one.