The correct word to use for what you have described in not "flip".allencorn wrote: on Sunday December 03 at 08:31
Playing with long pips on BH and inverted on FH and having the option to flip presents a dilemma for hittable balls to my backhand. Hitting with the long pips produces a weirder ball, but it is slower and seems to require more precision, as it floats. Flipping and hitting with inverted is faster and spinnier, but requires flipping in time to make the shot. I typically flip after I hit, but before my opponent hits, and have not yet developed the timing to flip to the inverted on demand when needed.
I notice that at the pro level, folks rarely attack with their long pips, but almost always use the inverted when attacking with their backhand. I assume at that level the weirdness doesn’t bother them as much and the slowness is more of a disadvantage. At the level of mere mortals, the weird hit with long pips seems to be more effective.
Curious what others have found and what they rely on more - flipping and hitting with inverted or hitting with their long pips.
Because the word "flip" has been traditionally associated with an actual stroke in table tennis. It is usually a short forehand stroke played over the table and is sort of an aggressive attack stroke.
The proper word you are looking for in reference to what you are asking about & traditionally used in table tennis is "twiddle"