Duality principle as applied to table tennis - Spinverted rubbers
Posted: September 13th, 2023, 11:29 pm
Any rubber that is easier for you to play with is also easier for your opponnet to play against.
In this first post I talk about spinny inverted rubbers & next post about pips & anti
If you are using a very spinny (or sticky) rubber that will produce lots of spin, it will also react equally violently against incoming spin.
Control is a complicated concept in table tennis. Control as applied to pros means evry little to amateurs. Pros can not only create heavy spins at highest speeds but can eaually control their returns consistently against incoming heavy spins at highest speeds. This is what separates the pros from the amateurs LOL
If you take a rubber like Hurricane with a sticky top sheet but a dead like sponge (Chinese) players boost to soften up the sponge & they get spin from both top sheet & sponge and this can be somewhat harder for an amateur to control while returning opponents' loops but amateurs though amateurs will get more spin in their loops. It is generally very difficult to chop hard with such rubbers but if you can control it the back spin you create will be very heavy as well.
On the other hand European & Japanese inverted rubbers work on a different approach. The top sheets aregenerally that sticky but the pros can cerate enough spins but also at high speeds (especially when boosted up)
In this first post I talk about spinny inverted rubbers & next post about pips & anti
If you are using a very spinny (or sticky) rubber that will produce lots of spin, it will also react equally violently against incoming spin.
Control is a complicated concept in table tennis. Control as applied to pros means evry little to amateurs. Pros can not only create heavy spins at highest speeds but can eaually control their returns consistently against incoming heavy spins at highest speeds. This is what separates the pros from the amateurs LOL
If you take a rubber like Hurricane with a sticky top sheet but a dead like sponge (Chinese) players boost to soften up the sponge & they get spin from both top sheet & sponge and this can be somewhat harder for an amateur to control while returning opponents' loops but amateurs though amateurs will get more spin in their loops. It is generally very difficult to chop hard with such rubbers but if you can control it the back spin you create will be very heavy as well.
On the other hand European & Japanese inverted rubbers work on a different approach. The top sheets aregenerally that sticky but the pros can cerate enough spins but also at high speeds (especially when boosted up)