Table Tennis

Journal, Table Tennis

Improve your Ping Pong skills by adding a skilled backhand (shakehand)

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Up until recently, I have never got an effective backhand for my ping pong skills set. It’s been a weakness, to say the least. With such an obvious weakness, my opponent can just continuously press my backhand and my strong forehand never sees the day of light. Since I got a table for me to practice at home, I have been practicing almost daily to get a handle on my backhand, and here is what I learned. If you read Chinese, here is a youtube video. Youtube Video.

  1. Don’t start practicing backhand drive/fast-loop first, even though that’s what the top players are using in matches right now. When I watch the games amongst top players, this is the technique I see the most, during their practice and actual competitions. So naturally, I want to practice this move. But this move is highly dependent on the wrist but equally dependent on the forearm. It’s very easy for a beginner to only use the wrist and forget about the forearm. The result will be the ball is spiny, but it hit the net a lot. Or you are going to miss the ball because the potential contact area between the paddle and the ball is too small. The correct way is to have a foundation in pushing first, using a lot more upper arm.
  2. Start practicing pushing the ball using the upper arm. This is done by holding your wrist to about chest level. Hold the wrist and forearm at the same angle to the chest, and only extend the upper arm back and forth. Start with your paddle touching the chest, as you will need plenty of “runway” to hit the ball with enough force. Remember to bend the wrist slightly, so the surface of the paddle backhand is parallel to the chest. This will become a good foundation for all later moves. Notice by holding the wrist to chest level, your shoulder is going to get tired a lot more frequently. This is fine at this stage because it will form a good habit for you to hit the ball will a higher percentage, as it’s closer to your eye level. The ultimate form will be slightly different as you learn how to relax.
  3. Practice for relaxing during the game. When I started playing ping pong, I was always tense when trying to hit the ball. Muscle tension is a good fight-or-flight response when physical activity is needed, but it’s not good for hitting ping pong balls effectively. Coaches always ask me to relax, but I was never able to do so in a game, same as when anybody tells anybody to “relax”. So you actually need to learn how to relax. Start by grabbing your paddle loosely, as if you are almost going to drop the paddle. But make sure you bend the wrist and make the paddle parallel to the chest. Without moving the wrist, or forearm, find a way to hit the ball by moving the legs, waist, shoulder, and upper arm, all at the same time, to hit the ball. This is against intuition because adults will use the smallest amount of muscle to finish a task. But “hit ball with your body” is good in the long term to make upper body muscle fatigue occur less frequently and reduce the chance of injury. Construct yourself to relax during practice, and if you do this enough times, you will be relaxed during a match. The goal is to relax during most of the match, but tense up when you actually hit the ball.
  4. Once you have enough practice of pushing, and able to draw paddle back to your chest fast enough in advance of hitting the ball, then you can practice drive/fast-loop. The key to this move is you have to hit the ball fast enough in four different aspects. I. You need to get the wrist drawback to your chest, like a spring. This time not by moving the upper arm, but by rotating wrist, so your thumb is 90 degrees with the forearm. This is because you are not going to have time to use the upper arm in a match. II. At the same time, you need to use the elbow as a pivot point and rotate the forearm towards the chest. In the beginning, you paddle will touch your chest, this is perfectly fine. You can hit the ball, by rotating the wrist and forearm at the same time, towards the front right side. Stop swinging when the forearm and hand are 90 degrees with the chest. III. You need to hit the ball when it just bounced off the table before it reaches the highest point, normally much earlier than your other shots. This way you don’t actually need to distinguish whether the ball is no-spin or topspin because the topspin have not started to take effect yet. VI. Also need to actually hit the ball kind of fast, it will hit the net if you hit too slow because your paddle angle is actually more shallow or flatter. Because you are not hitting the ball with the paddle perpendicular to the table, the maximum chance of success is naturally going to be less. So it’s a more risky shot than just push the ball. But because of its high power and spin, your opponent is not likely to return it, even at the world level. The overall effectiveness is high enough to use regularly in matches. The hard requirement is you need good leg movement to get to the ball, with enough time for you to bend knees, rotate the wrist, and hit the ball before it reaches the highest point. Otherwise, it’s going to fly away and miss the table.
  5. If your steps are not fast enough, the alternative is to hit the ball slower, use less forearm strength, when the ball already reached the highest point or started falling. Your return will be spiny but lack the high speed and power in the drive/fast-loop move.

Now you learned the secret of drive/fast loop backhand using shakehand grip, go pratice!

Table Tennis

How to loop

Reading Time: 2 minutesAlthough never continuous, I spend more than a decade playing table tennis. Until recently, I never cared too much about winning, and I always thought that’s the reason I always lose matches to the people I didn’t think was very good.

Then, last year I started to want to win and really started to watch everything single Youtube video I can find about Table Tennis. I keep hearing coaches talk about that I need to have sudden accelerations when hitting the ball to generate topspin. I always tried that first and the ball always fly too far away from the table. I spend about 6 month doing that, but the ball alway hit the edges of my paddle.

So I changed back to a more vertical paddle angle, just to reduced the number of times I miss the ball. Then one day, out the blue, started to hit the ball using bottom side of my paddle. The shot sounded more muffed, instead of my regular high pitch sound hits.

During the same time, I also started to use my waist and leg during my swing. It started with my leg pushing the ground, then my waist moves, and my arm moved last. I didn’t have to move my arm so actively, it as though my waist directed the who motion and dragged my arm.

Then I started to have larger range of motion on my wrist when I just about to hit the ball to create spin. That worked just a little better, but it’s hard to life my wrist hitting forehand. I started to use my forearm to mimic the same motion of my wrist, this seemed to be easier on my arm. One day during a match with a much bigger guy at the club, I actively try to have sudden movement in my forearm, just like when I try to serve underspins. Miraculously, I was able to create the slow, upward kind of loop consistently.

This worked, because as soon as the ball the other side of the table, it started to accelerate forward much faster than a normal hit. In another words, the exist angle is greater than the entry angle. This creates a lot of unpredictability for the opponent. Although slower than just a hard hit, this type of ball is hard to return.

Then I watched another Youtube video, that was trying to mimic how Ma Long does loops. After each swing, instead of swing his arm back to the original position, he let the arm drop naturally, swing the shoulder back, and lift arm slightly to get back to original position. This technique made the transition faster because it decreased the radius of the arm swing and therefore, faster. It also let the arm and shoulder rest momentarily between hits, ensure the athlete don’t get too tired after hitting many loops.

Learned how to loop also made my serves better, because using this sudden movement also increased the spin of my serves, as evidenced by the many aces I have playing at the club and the gym. Going ahead, I plan to improve the forward speed of my loop, and making it spinny and faster, and creating the ultimate weapon for winners.

Table Tennis

My journey in Table Tennis

Reading Time: 3 minutesI first learned how to play table tennis when I was 6. My mom used to play when she was in elementary school, then in college. It was hard to find a table to play in China when I was little. We often sneak into my father’s work place, a table that was employee only. I started with pips and shake-hand. That was the most popular style in China at the time. And it was how my mom played, so that’s what she can teach me.

I started learning the Chinese style, which is hit forward rather than loop. Besides, my mom doesn’t know how to loop. Within a few years, I was pretty good at hitting forehand. Of course, my backhand was just pushing. Flip and hit is much harder, and shake-hand style for penhold was not invented yet. My main weapon was forehand, but always had trouble to defend loops. At that time, I was more interested in other things, like pool. I would often skip table tennis and go play pool in the next room.

After I can to United States and started college, I found a group students and alumni who are passionate about table tennis. I started going to practice regularly, twice a week. I started going to collegiate and USATT tournaments, but I lost more than I won at Team B level, and have a rating of lower than 1200. I never got much better than when I was a 13 year old kid in China. It’s mostly because I just want to exercise and socialize with friends. I never cared about winning, or wanted to win. I just got more fluent in what I can do. After I graduated college and started studying for my PhD, school consumed my life, and I had no time to play table tennis. Even when I started my postdoc in New York City, I never got to play regularly because the clubs in upper west side of New York are not friendly.

After I found a real job in Hartford, CT, I found this great club in Hartford with a lot of great players. The people there made my feel like I was back in college again. They are eager to help me improve my techniques and not afraid of playing with someone who is worse in skill. I bought a better paddle, albeit not customized for my style. I started care about winning and wanted to win. I improved serve and changed strokes to at least reduced missed hits.

Then I really started to get better when I started to look for Youtube videos of Chinese coaches online. There are some great videos where coaches talked to amateur players and help them improve their game. This helps a lot because the amateurs are just as bad as I am. When I used to watch world class player online, I never learned the process of growth and just try to mimic the really high level stuff. I went through all the videos and I can find and started with the really basic things like swing without ball. The mostly important things I learned was swing forward and how to use wrist and waist.

While working at my new job, I was fortunate enough to be able to play table tennis at work for a break. Have constant access to a table, albeit thin and crappy, helped a lot because I can practice serves and simple forehand stroke whenever I wanted. I played with coworkers during break for doubles. None of them are better than me, but while I teach them about table tennis, I realize what my strokes looks like, and helped me discovered my own problems.

Just a few days ago, I figured out how to do forehand loops. I was playing with a big guy at the club and figured out how to use wrist to loop and not miss the ball too often. I was so excited. I learned it without a professional coach, and after 28 years since I first played it. It was the relentless pursuit that help me get to this point. And I’m sure I will keep improve if I keep trying.