Great video Heming. Your wrist was open in upside whereas timo wrist is downside . I feel i can do wrist movement easily when my wrist is little down than up. Please share your viewd
@@mayankchaturvedi570 thanks man It really doesn’t matter so long as you get that brush contact with ball and rubber so that you can reliably and consistently get spin on your topspin
Hi Heming, when you talk about rotation and weight transfer please give some tips on how older club players can do weight transfer. The tips which I have seen so far might work well for young players or while in practice but have very limited application for older players.
The way you do it is still the same whether you’re a 13 year old or 69 year old However if you’re not very strong/powerful and not in great shape, a personal trainer who can be athlete specific with nutrition and strength training -> is your solution to fix this. This is not my personal area or expertise so I’ll stay in my lane of teaching skills that I know and worked for me and others to reach higher levels. Sorry 😁 I figure it’s more integrity if I don’t pretend to be an expert in a field that isn’t my expertise area. It’s more honest and fair to you guys
hey, thanks for the awesome video. loving your content recently. I implemented your tips and I have gotten visibly more spin + my practise partners have more trouble blocking my shots. however, I noticed my shotd have more sidespin now. what do you think the reason could be? I definitely want to be able to conteol when its pure topspin and when sidespin is mixed in aswell greetings from germany
Great video Heming - thank you. So when you get a fast ball that you counter when you have limited hip and elbow movement and use the opponents pace, do you still use the wrist like this or keep it fixed? What about for heavy pushes, should older plays still ACTIVELY use the elbow to generate enough pace? Love to get your clarification on this.
Thank you! Yes I still use the same wrist except I wouldn’t cock the wrist backwards, I would just follow through but have zero backswing with both my wrist and whole arm. I borrow the incoming pace AND spin of the fast ball and generate a bit more myself of spin and speed with the follow through motion
Doesn’t matter your age, height or anything, unless someone hits it fast into your body and it forces you to use elbow movement accidentally. On forehand topspin in table tennis you should NEVER voluntarily use your elbow
Fantastic video! This is exactly what I needed. One question, which one is the video you are mentioning on the 'how to hold the paddle correctly ' . I watched multiple videos of yours but couldn't figure out . Can you please help me out here . Thank you for the great video in advance
Check it out here as well as all my best exclusive content on my online community and course that is FREE for a limited time www.skool.com/letsthinklikeeliteathletes/about
It’s on my Skool community. It’s currently FREE as I’m in the middle of creating an online course to help club level table tennis players level up, which will soon be a paid course when it’s fully published. Would you like to join?
thats a myth. You can improve at really any age. Of course you will learn slightly faster at a younger age, but people who don't start at age 20 or even more, can still get good at table tennis just the same. You don't suddenly lose your ability to learn once your not a child anymore. However, if you start past the age of 12/13, then becoming a pro is really a very unlikely chance