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This is interesting. Me and probably many others learned this also, but speaking to coaches lately it seems this is changing.
Some coaches nowadays also recommend a bit faster setups with thicker sponges.
One of the reasons given was mainly that the kids are tought this way earlier about spin sensivity and tempo from thicker sponges, cause most children can adapt faster than grown-ups.
Different schools and different coaches. Not saying the table tennis school I promote is the better one, but I think it's important for people to get a "correct" technique as fast as possible, with that I don't mean a by the book technique cause I really encourage personal styles, but it all has to start with a stabile foundation. The problem I see with people having faster setups early on is that the bat will do alot of the work resulting in a half done technique. I also kinda disagree with the theory about handling spin and tempo better early on when it nowadays are maybe both less spin and tempo and more physique involved compared with how it was before.
But I have to give you that I have heard people say "it's better to play with the setup you are intended to play with as fully developed player". Kinda sounds logical but I think that view forgets the time it takes to become "fully developed" versus the fact that the equipment change. On the other hand, the equipment is just a part of the big picture where other elements problably determines the outcome more than the early stage setup. Just my thoughts on it as a trainer thou I nowadays regarding table tennis only work as a private coach and a private trainer instead of being a club trainer.
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