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TT Penhold Beginner. Need Tips!!! |
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VTTCphilipp
Beginner Joined: 04/02/2020 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 13 |
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Posted: 04/02/2020 at 11:37am |
https://youtu.be/anVfPUcM5Ww
Here is a video of me playing penhold in a match. Pls tell me what is good and what I could do better I am very eager to learn to play penhold as I am the only one in my region that does not want to play shakehand anymore |
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jpenman
Super Member Joined: 02/14/2020 Location: - Status: Offline Points: 128 |
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Edited by jpenman - 07/26/2021 at 10:58am |
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TT newbie
Gold Member Joined: 11/25/2011 Location: Far Far Away Status: Offline Points: 1391 |
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Or jumping rope. It´s excellent to get rhythm.
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mischasln
Super Member Joined: 09/18/2016 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 265 |
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You guys are coming up with footwork... he needs to learn everything from scratch.
#1 Learn how to do a proper serve. You won't impress teenage girls or others by looking into the camera after every two points but by knowing the rules of this game. #2 Don't start with this monkey-style ready position. No matter if you play penhold, shakehand, pistol or naked with your chin - your blade is always above table height. #3 Watch my playlists day and night, do shadow movements at home and ask your coach for multi-ball sessions. Although my playlists are primarily for J-Pen users, you'll also benefit from it. It's organized by various techniques, starting with the correct grip. There's a video of Kaii Yoshida you want to watch. Although you play somewhat of traditional because you've never learned a modern backhand (there's a reason you have a backhand rubber attached), you want to look-up videos for "penhold backhand" afterwards. #4 This list can go forever but you need to learn the fundamentals first.
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heavyspin
Gold Member Joined: 08/16/2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1533 |
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You make too many strokes with almost no connection with your hips and shoulders. Note how much better your body is connected to your stroke on the successful fh attacks than with the other strokes.
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An EJ to a table tennis player is an equipment junkie. An ej to a mathematician is a standard basis vector.
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wappak
Member Joined: 05/05/2019 Location: rising sun Status: Offline Points: 62 |
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i suggest you use short pips on your forehand and watch lots of he zhiwen videos on youtube
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jpenman
Super Member Joined: 02/14/2020 Location: - Status: Offline Points: 128 |
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Edited by jpenman - 07/26/2021 at 10:58am |
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benfb
Platinum Member Joined: 10/10/2008 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2709 |
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I thought you looked OK for a beginner. Heavyspin's post is good advice. I didn't like mischasin's advice so much, but that may be because I found his tone unnecessarily rude.
I thought your serves were about right for your level, and certainly not where you need to start on getting better. The thing where you hang your hand to the floor while receiving looks a little weird and it's not very efficient, but I've seen some very strong juniors do the same thing (eventually their coaches train them out of it). There's just a general lot of training that needs to be done. Footwork or synchronizing your body with your stroke both sound good to me.
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Simon_plays
Gold Member Joined: 05/02/2015 Location: Vietnam Status: Offline Points: 1084 |
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I've even had a coach recommend hanging both hands down when receiving to loosen up before putting them into the right place again.
And I agree on the rude tone, really not necessary to just focus on negatives and tell someone they need to watch hours of professional players.
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ChichoFicho
Platinum Member Joined: 06/24/2009 Location: Earth Status: Offline Points: 2118 |
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I think you are already better than 90% of the people on the forum.
If you want to get even better, avoid using the reverse penhold backhand. If you try to master it now, you will become lazy and your footwork is going to suffer. Edited by ChichoFicho - 04/03/2020 at 5:33am |
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Darker Speed 70
Hammond FA Speed Tyotokusen |
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DonnOlsen
Gold Member Joined: 11/15/2008 Location: Maryland, USA Status: Offline Points: 1751 |
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Hi,
You have done very well developing some of the features of your game, including the ability to accelerate impressively with your forehand. Your overall playing orientation is classically penholder traditional, with a strong inclination to forehand offensive/backhand control and defense. While your sense of this structure is well developed as you are disciplined in performing in compliance with it, the modern game necessitates a much more balanced capability between forehand and backhand. The basic capabilities of offense, defense, and control need to be comparable between the two sides. Your formidable forehand side is clearly more mature by a wide margin than your backhand. A good recommendation is to strive to reach a comparable technique maturity between your forehand and your backhand in the fundamental responsibilities of stroke play. Sports performance research has determined that there is a positive correlation between the athleticism of the athlete and the ability to develop technical sports skills, in particular fine motor skills. The video clip shows clearly you have high quality athletic ability, thus the prospects of your development in table table are very good indeed. Coupled with your commitment, a bright future awaits you! Thanks.
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Tenergy: Two weeks of heaven, followed by three months of excellence, then, a nice rubber.
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blahness
Premier Member Joined: 10/18/2009 Location: Melbourne Status: Offline Points: 5443 |
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+1, the elbow is way too far away from his body especially when pushing. He only won the game because the girl for some reason didn't attack his obvious sidetopspin serve. If he played in my club every single one of those serves will have been destroyed mercilessly.
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Viscaria FH: Hurricane 8-80 BH: D05 Back to normal shape bats :( |
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BeaverMD
Gold Member Joined: 11/09/2007 Location: Maryland, USA Status: Offline Points: 1897 |
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Hey, I like your style! The shifty eye look is way too cool as if saying "you're still recording my awesomeness, right?" You wrote "anymore" so you have been playing shakehand and now want to switch. First thing you have to ask yourself is why? Think if you will lose all that you have invested in SH style and see if it is worth it to switch to penhold. Or maybe you like to use penhold when playing against someone lower level like the girl (if so you're a jerk hahaha!). If just for fun, hey, why not. First, a couple of basic things: 1. If you are going to be a real penholder, it looks like you are still using a shakehand blade. Better get a real penhold blade. CP seems to fit you better than Japanese or Korean one-ply. 2. Do not toss the ball from your fingertips. Toss from a flat palm. Techniques: 1. Serves are good. You have a long cross court and long down the line. Make these faster, especially the Waldner/LGL down the line. But you really need some short underspin serves to compliment and make the long ones effective. Search ghost serves. 2. Because you are really a shakehander, your penhold backhand is non-existent. As shown in 6-1 and 10-5, when the girl attacked your backhand, the point was over. I suggest sticking to a Ma Lin style which is traditional penhold backhand close to the table and maybe in the future learning RPB when you are forced farther away. But, I think once you face players that can return the sidetop serves and they drill it to your backhand, you're right back to the shakehand grip. So maybe you should keep using that racket :) |
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b3nhold
Member Joined: 09/21/2014 Location: London Status: Offline Points: 40 |
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Yeah looks decent, the following is my opinion.
Keep a pronounced bend in your legs at all times to help movement and keep your head at ball height for control. Your ready position is too far to the forehand for a forehand dominant player imo. Attack all long or half long serves, it's important you get in first, your push looks decent but mix up short and long, only push short serves. You look pretty comfortable with your equipment so get a penhold version if they make it or a blade with similar composition (use blade database). I'd echo what chicho said about not focusing on backhand too much and instead focusing on staple forehand footwork drills as otherwise your footwork could suffer but if I was you I'd still learn the RPB. My advice is to do drills with no more than one backhand in a row and focus on pivoting drills. You want to learn a very consistent backhand which keeps you in the rally but the forehand is what you will win points on Best of luck!
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JPen player.
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John_S
Beginner Joined: 12/13/2023 Location: Greece Status: Offline Points: 2 |
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I know it's an old post, but my eyes hurt watching this... There's a video of Wang Hao teaching a wide range of penhold skills, like basics, racket placement, fingers, etc. It's one of the best out there, from a true master of the trade. here's the link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrrIDgT6TnY After that, there's the serve which is fine, but the recieve isn't, use compact moves for the recieve and even for the fh spin, don't over extend the arm, keep the stroke short and sweet. The rest will come naturally by watching the pros, like tpb and rpb. Also something I just noticed, try to finish the fh spin near your forehead and not the chin.
Edited by John_S - 12/13/2023 at 3:23pm |
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yogi_bear
Forum Moderator Joined: 11/25/2004 Location: Philippines Status: Offline Points: 7219 |
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1. leaning forward too much but knees are not bent properly.
2. needs to work out on coordination of swings and waist pivot when doing forehand attacks. 3. needs proper side to side footwork basic practice. 4. learn to brush the ball properly.
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