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footwork musings |
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blahness
Premier Member Joined: 10/18/2009 Location: Melbourne Status: Offline Points: 5443 |
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Posted: 03/13/2021 at 3:36am |
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Just found that you can sort of time the timing of our feet landing on the ground to coincide just when or slightly after the opponent makes the shot, to give you the greatest flexibility to chase the ball with the feet.
For example when you hop on the ground before your opponent serves, if it's long you just shift your weight towards the ball, if it's short then you shift your weight forward then you use that impulse to propel your feet forward (push off with right leg, then left leg follows and right leg lands at the final position). If it's to the right, you again shift your weight to the right to give the impulse for you to move to the right, and similar if it's to the left except that the left leg pushes off (it's a natural movement if you shift your weight to the left the tendency is to use your left leg to push off to move your body towards the left) So this simplifies movement a lot, just time your microhop just when the opponent contacts the ball and then make sure the body weight is shifted towards the ball to initiate the push off in the correct direction to chase the ball. After a short push, it's also similar except the key is the left foot. So during a push you press on your right leg, then use your right leg to bounce back on your left leg, and the timing of that left leg landing should coincide with when the opponent contacts the ball. If the ball is short again then you would push off the left leg again to propel your body forward to land your right leg in the correct position. if the ball is deep to the right, then you again push off the left leg but now shift the weight backwards to the right so that the left leg pushes off giving you an impulse towards the right, backwards. TLDR this is what I have learnt recently doing footwork practice...
Edited by blahness - 03/13/2021 at 3:39am |
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maur1010
Member Joined: 02/07/2021 Location: nsw aust Status: Offline Points: 41 |
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All this reminds me of the timing of the tennis split step.
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blahness
Premier Member Joined: 10/18/2009 Location: Melbourne Status: Offline Points: 5443 |
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Hmm interesting, just googled it and yes it's exactly the same concept! So you time the bounce and then shift your body weight to the ball to give you the correct impulse to move to the correct direction. Honestly I never seen any tutorials in TT for this strangely...but as I observed, all of the top players do it... |
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TYBB
Beginner Joined: 12/02/2020 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Look at Robert Gardos, Michel Saive and Ito Mima, you will see they all use it.
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blahness
Premier Member Joined: 10/18/2009 Location: Melbourne Status: Offline Points: 5443 |
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Actually most top players use it...the difference is in the magnitude of the hop.
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smackman
Assistant Moderator Joined: 07/20/2009 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 3264 |
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I think staying flat footed saves me effort
I like watching MMA women fighters smaller weight divisions as they are always bouncing and I think they could have been great table tennis players
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TYBB
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IMO hard to learn from Pro player. We should watch simple video like the link below:
Edited by TYBB - 03/22/2021 at 9:19pm |
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TYBB
Beginner Joined: 12/02/2020 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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IMO Table tennis pro use the flow split step. Like the video below: Edited by TYBB - 03/22/2021 at 8:37pm |
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maur1010
Member Joined: 02/07/2021 Location: nsw aust Status: Offline Points: 41 |
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My question is why do most pros do not do a split step to receive serve?
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blahness
Premier Member Joined: 10/18/2009 Location: Melbourne Status: Offline Points: 5443 |
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They do actually...Ito Mima is the most obvious...
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maur1010
Member Joined: 02/07/2021 Location: nsw aust Status: Offline Points: 41 |
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I looked at Ma Long vs Tomokazu Harimoto on this video.I do not see a clean split step on return of serve like the tennis pros do. |
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blahness
Premier Member Joined: 10/18/2009 Location: Melbourne Status: Offline Points: 5443 |
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It's not a jump but just microhop, I see it in both Harimoto and Ma Long
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Joo Se Kev
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Great thread. I've got a post in the works on this very topic. It's simple really, think about the first law of interia...an object in motion stays in motion! By utilizing a small micro-jump and landing in the ready position, you will store elastic energy in your muscles. This will allow you to react with the ground better and move more quickly to field the next shot.
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pingpongpaddy
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in comparing lawn tennis split step with TT, we have to bear in mind that in the time available for a lawn tennis split step a fast tt shot can easily travel the length of the table. So, while the the principle is the same the tt split step is executed much more quickly and the feet literally brush the floor rather than jumping.
Having both feet off the ground is the time when the player is most vulnerable to being wrong footed. I like to hear my pupils shoes squeaking constantly as they move in footwork training |
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blahness
Premier Member Joined: 10/18/2009 Location: Melbourne Status: Offline Points: 5443 |
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I've seen this being taught a lot (that you should microhop all the time), but I'm not sure if I agree with it anymore. Bouncing too much mindlessly is simply inefficient and it makes for unstable strokes. In my opinion you only need one microhop with both legs, timed exactly just when your opponent hits the ball, then shift your body weight accordingly and move speedily and precisely to where you need to be. I'm trying to learn this precise movement too, but it's not an easy habit to ingrain.
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