Why keep advocating this falsehood?! After you impact the ball, the ball doesn't stay in place midair, waiting for you to brush it! The real key is understanding the pure geometries at contact: timing of impact, blade angle to the ball, angle of the blade's approach to the ball; and finally, how you should move your arm and body to achieve those geometries. You learn to do it by first mastering the forehand drive or forehand counter, 攻球, which teaches you the feel of mostly hitting or impacting the ball. Then you master the brush loop, 加轉弧圈球, which teaches you the feel of mostly brushing the ball. Then and only then do you graduate to the drive loop, 前沖弧圈球. Also know that brushing is not exclusively brushing upwards. You can brush at a range of angles. As long as the blade's angle of approach to the ball at contact is close to or is equal to the blade angle to the ball at contact, you're mostly brushing. The larger the difference between the two, the more impact you're imparting at contact.
There is lots of nuances like this in table tennis. For example: hitting the front edge when serving gives you more spin because you the ball has more rubber to roll on the rubber longer. Even though the ball doesnt actually stay longer on the racket, it still works.
@@edwingosens8798I contend that has more to do with the difference in location between the front and back edges relative to your range of motion. The front edge, given its location in the range of motion, naturally accelerates more and reaches higher velocity, hence more spin.
Love this Channel very informative Thank You Guys!
thank you, good lesson
I agree i've try this it works!
If u can get it on the table, flat hitting seems very efficient.
long pips players do that
@vyacheslavbrodovoy2039 i mean flat hit with speed XD I don't think long pips can get that much power, no?
note that they are using chinese rubber. It allows much flatter impact
Its unfair to diss Ovtcharovs forhand game in this way. He is one of the most stable non chinese player in the world and his backhand is incredible.
Why keep advocating this falsehood?!
After you impact the ball, the ball doesn't stay in place midair, waiting for you to brush it!
The real key is understanding the pure geometries at contact: timing of impact, blade angle to the ball, angle of the blade's approach to the ball; and finally, how you should move your arm and body to achieve those geometries.
You learn to do it by first mastering the forehand drive or forehand counter, 攻球, which teaches you the feel of mostly hitting or impacting the ball. Then you master the brush loop, 加轉弧圈球, which teaches you the feel of mostly brushing the ball. Then and only then do you graduate to the drive loop, 前沖弧圈球.
Also know that brushing is not exclusively brushing upwards. You can brush at a range of angles. As long as the blade's angle of approach to the ball at contact is close to or is equal to the blade angle to the ball at contact, you're mostly brushing. The larger the difference between the two, the more impact you're imparting at contact.
There is lots of nuances like this in table tennis. For example: hitting the front edge when serving gives you more spin because you the ball has more rubber to roll on the rubber longer. Even though the ball doesnt actually stay longer on the racket, it still works.
@@edwingosens8798I contend that has more to do with the difference in location between the front and back edges relative to your range of motion. The front edge, given its location in the range of motion, naturally accelerates more and reaches higher velocity, hence more spin.
@@edwingosens8798 Take or watch a super slo-mo of a loop or chop, the ball never rolls on the rubber. It touches one point and then goes back out.
@@ddd778 isnt that what I just said?
@@edwingosens8798 Where you hit on your racket does not affect your spin that much. There's a good slow motion video that shows it in 5000 fps