Joo sae Hyuk, Ryu Seung Min, and Oh sang Eun all retired from the Korean National Team. All of them brought a unique style to the game of Table Tennis. Sadly, we don't see a variety of play styles anymore
The new gen korean team are weak look at jung compared to the 3 ex korean players you named above, just really physically lacking, oh is 185cm tall with thighs the size of a tree trunk
@@chrissantos1877 interesting. Do you mean the transition from 38 cell to 40 cell made penhold styles such as pimples uncompetitive in male tt? I wonder which one played a bigger role the diameter increase or the rule change from 21 to 11 point per set
Joo SH was so entertaining? Wang Yang (rep Slovakia) is probably the closest male player at present as compared with Joo; alas, there are more female players (Han Ying, Hitomi Sato et al) as compared to male players playing this way
@@dreamer2309 Bro, he's anything but boring. What I think it's boring is the gameplay nowadays, cuz everyone has almost the same and unique style, with just a few exceptions.
Well, it was more of a botch from Ma after an EXTREMELY good get from Juicy. If Ma doesn't try to win the point by going short, and he drives that ball to Joo's backhand corner, then the point is Ma's. The only reason Ma went short is because he knew he had an opponent who had just used a desperation shot from far away which required every bit of physicality to actually get to. It was a great decision, just awful execution.
Polalala. Quand je reregarde les matchs de joo se hyuk. Je réalisés a quel point c'est un fou . Il est sur toutes les balles. Punaise même si c'est difficile d'être champion du monde où olympique avec ces systèmes de jeu, ça reste une légende. La grande classe.
Hard for an elite defensive player to beat an elite pen holder. The pen holder has a huge style advantage with top rate forehand for looping, smashing and blocking when given enough time. A player has to be able to pressure a pen holder wide to backhand and wide to forehand close to table. A defensive player gives too much time for pen holder to set up for that powerful forehand. Joo Se Hyuk had to risk attacking off the table to make a game of it. Hard to do over an entire match and be successful. As athletic and skilled as Joo Se Hyuk is he came up short.
If you notice joo se hyuk..he plays defensive mostly....I would say around 95 percent????...but when he attacks..in the rest of the 5 percent...his attack brings a lot of points
His forehand technique against chops looks really wasteful. When he couldn't borrow power from the opponent his posture and movement became really distorted. It was Wang Hao who had really good strokes against choppers.
I believe Ma is still using the Yasaka Ma Lin Extra Offensive here, which is what he won the Olympics in 2008 with. If not, then he's using the Yasaka Ma Lin Carbon. I know for sure he's using the Skyline TG2 on the forehand and I believe he's using one of the Bryce rubbers on the backhand
Non of these choppers or pushers have ever been champions they should be placed in a league of Their own along with the pips and anti-spin community....they are just wasting everyone's time and energy
We need him to be a coach. Teach how active players can become champions. In 2019, Liu Shiwen won the World Table Tennis Championship in Budapest, and he played an important role as Liu Shiwen's head coach. Prior to this, Liu Shiwen had no competition results.