Never congratulate anyone in advance .. ..Brings bad luck, even though it's superstitious, I think we don't need to wish happy birthday in advance, and any way, it's still not his day! No point;)
Your content is so good!! 100% agree with your take here. Multiball will also get you in physical shape very fast haha I think the tt community would really benefit from more pros like you making this type of quality content so I hope you continue!!
1. The game is generally won and lost in the serve & receive. 2. I am a highly licensed coach in multiple sports, and in every coaching course, no matter the sport, they teach you to train players with game-like drills. In TT, 2 things tend to separate top level amateurs and lowest level professionals. The first thing is the ability to play back heavy spin and speed consistently. Top level amateurs struggle against those fast + spinny shots. Lowest level pros do not struggle with them. The second thing is their anticipation and ability to get into position early. Top level amateurs tend to get caught flat-footed a lot. Lowest level pros tend to anticipate early and get into position early. So, if you're an amateur, this sort of training will only get you halfway. You will need to master anticipation, and that will require a different type of training. But, if you want to raise your game the most, then you should master your serve & receive game, as well as your anticipation + ability to get into position and attack the 3rd ball, attack or counterattack the 4th ball, and attack the 5th ball. Make all of your serves look EXACTLY the same too. Then, you will be able to fool your opponents with the spin. The way to make your serves look the same is by making contact on different parts of the ball. Other than that, your motion should look the same, regardless of spin.
So great to see your footwork so detailed!!! Favourite moment was for sure the "reaction practise" when the coach imitated your wobbeling around during the exercise XDDDDD Little thing about the camera angle, it would be great to see the opposite side of the table to see the lenght of your shots, little thing, but maybe you could check this in future videos. Love your content!
I practiced at a greater intensity in the 60's with a (homemade) inverted rubber return-board* . Even the slowest pace was faster, and it was up to 4 drives/second. But it lacked the more real-world dynamic multiball (almost) emulates. One would think this did nothing to improve consistency in actually getting the ball back in a real game, but in practice warming up with players made no difference; relentless counterdriving. This applied to normal opponents. Weird players, awkward serves, and long pips I could barely manage. ____ *placed at net-distance, not at the end. I had a number of return boards for different purposes: inverted rubber, masonite, pressed cardboard (short-range flicks vs short backspin returns), and a sheet of light plywood at the end of the table for chop-like backspin returns.
One of the best, but near the top for inside look of higher-tier player's practice and mindset. Kanak Jha's is also shaping up to be like this. I wish there were more of these channel's and fewer of the nobody-coach videos and their stuff like "easy way to return any serve", and "how to beat long-pips blockers".
The role of a coach in providing multi-ball training with various variations is very important. what is even more crucial and challenging is how to make it consistent and sustain it over the years, just like the Chinese players who have achieved such great success. Thank you, Anders, for sharing your knowledge through the video
Hello Anders! Just a suggestion: would be great if you would keep the raw training audio without any music I'm sure true fans would love the sound of the ball more than anything Secondly, I recently saw a video where British international badminton players went to play in China and even the badminton training is way more intense than in Europe, and the Chinese pair mentioned that daily massages were a very important part of their routine to recover from all that training. Watching this video itself makes me tired so remembered this fact😁 Thank you so much for the high quality content!
You are right on everything! Multi-balls in my opinion is the foundation of table tennis and it should always be part of the training but training at the table is equally important. When you reach a pro level then as you pointed it out training at the table is more important - ideally with different players!
Cracking summary and boy oh boy that was quite a workout session... watched the cloudwalker playing in the chinese super league ... we're blessed ...these are fantastic times to be a tt fan. All the best all, over the festive period
Awesome Anders. It's also extremely demanding from a physical perspective. In 2015 - 2016 I had training sessions at the Borussia Düsseldorf and after each 2 hour training session I was TOTALLY rinsed. I was going back home to die in the sofa...
Thanks a for the advice Anders, I can definitely relate a lot because my training used to be multiball exclusively. I improved faster and my technique is generally better than most but my match play and adjusting during matches definitely suffered
Thanks for the video really interesting as well as your final considerations. It's like seeing my muliball session just at 10x speed!😂 Thanks for being so nice to share this videos with us. Keep up!💪👍
Thanks for sharing with people, this particularly a great way of teaching, you are a very skillfull player, every video will be greatfully appreciated, please KEEP YOUR VIDEOS COMING UP 😊❤
Comparing this to my impression of your play ~2 years ago, is it possible that your footwork has improved immensely already? I'm glad to see you're doing what it takes to continue your ascendance and I hope to witness the results in 2025. Cheers!
I'd argue that perfecting your technique will allow better decision making during a match giving you that extra bit of confidence, or even put you in a position to do a shot you would not have tried otherwise. But then again I'm not a pro 😂 Love the vids dude, keep going!
I won't lie, at first I thought you looked boring and snobbish... but... I was completely wrong, today you are for me one of the best interesting players to follow and now I even root for you in games... unless you play against Hugo Calderano, because he is from my country 😁 Congratulations on the wonderful channel!!! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Very interesting insight, ty! For me, having done a lot of regular drills during my first 2 years of training, my biggest weakness is serve/receive. It´s so much harder to learn. If I get into the open game I can hang with much higher ranked players here and there, but tt is mainly first 3 balls, so yeah... I try to play more matches now, but the endless possibility´s make it very hard to improve.
Try to play with the timing on the receive and the serve. Try hitting the serve approximately at net height and not too early, otherwise it bounces too high and you don't get much spin on it. For the receive, many players respond to under spin serves by taking the ball early after the bounce. Try to take them and pendulum serves with side spin/under spin a little bit later. Let somebody serve you the same serve a couple times and then play with your timing and practice a offensive answer (flip/topspin) and a defensive answer (short/half long push) and see what's comfortable for you. This is what helped me to make improvements when I was already playing for a while.
Oh, and one thing many people still miss. Your shots should have a purpose. Don't just serve and hope they can't attack it. Serve to their weaker side or to a spot that limits their answers to shots that benefit you. For example my backhand was stronger against under spin than my forehand, so I used a lot of pendulum serves to forehand and elbow of the opponent since it's hard for them to push to my forehand from there due to the sidepin.
I lost my breath just watching this, a gruesome stamina test What i like about multiball is when you're done, you know you did something 99% of the population never couldn't)) keep up the great content!
Great video yet again! Also, surprisingly funny the moment you ask "What do you want me to do?", hahaha. As a trainer, these are the funniest moments of giving multiball training. Good luck in upcoming events soon!
Not a huge fan of multiball training but when done right it can be very effective. And the multiball in this video is done really well. But similar as training against a robot I feel it's more to learn performing strokes consistently than to learn to play matches.
I think it's great, as long as the emphasis is on training, not 'coaching'. That's what I like about the coach in this video. He's not interrupting with useless chatter or stroke-demonstration. If there's a systematic error in stroke-production, it will get ironed out by... more stroke production.
Beautiful! @AnderslindTT is the best! 💪Could you please position the camera straight (not at an angle) so we can better see how the body should move in details?
Without multiple ball sessions at 3x that time span x 4 days minimum per week, you will struggle physically to beat the Chinese, the Koreans, and the Japanese. It is super essential. Of course getting in record amount of games so as not to lose the natural game and match feel is crucial.
It's especially good for young players to build the technique and patience. The best and most efficient trainings are the most boring ones. That's why Chinese are so good fundamentally. They do a lot of same boring and exhausting thing until they master it. It builds the discipline very well.
@@AnderslindTTyeah, I found Very particular, Very unique. Top layer koto we can see on manu baldes like TB, Viscaria. But, below koto, there is limba, which turns unique. The only similar Blade I found was the old Hayabusa zi from Xiom. (I think is relaunching this séries). This koto-limba inner carbon makes me think that the rationale of the Blade is to build a piece that is faster than Apolónia, with less vibration to keep stability. And also, enhance Sweet spot and tô activate speed even with small or improvised swings. And ALL of these, without losing the versatility that a talent player needs tô do creative shots, trickshot. (Do not lose the feeling shots).
@@AnderslindTTanother perspective (and simpler) to analyze the Blade is: as per many many Blade are composed of koto, ALC. Limba, Kiri core, the rationale of your blade is that they wanted to makes a INNER version of Timo Boll/ChuanChiYuan2013/Kenta/Viscaria/FanZhendong/ZhanJike/ZhouYu3/TreiberK/LinGaoYuan
4:42 I'm a lefty penholder and my forehand is my best shot. It tends to go cross court and I probably loop around the side of the ball a little more than most people. The ball has some side kick off the bounce but I'd like your thoughts on doing this inside-out forehand. I find if one always expects my loop to go cross-court, it's easier to block. What do you think about when looping either inside-out or down the line. The table is shorter there compared to cross-court and I find it easy to loop this ball long. Do you bend or flare your hand back to brush the back right of the ball as a shakehander in this shot? Do you execute this shot with ever so slight less power as compared to cross-court to allow the ball enough time to curve down since the table is shorter? I can do it with penhold but the natural part of the grip (try it. put the blade in your wrist and bend your wrist back) does make it harder I think to fade the shot out wide. Any tips or thoughts would be appreciated. thanks.
Interesting that you missed more going from slow to fast than from fast to slow, I'm the complete opposite so often when someone takes all the pace off the ball I go too early and hit a donkey 😅, really nice how you patiently wait for the ball then go
Hi Anders, thank you for this informative video. But I'm asking myself what would be the best way to practice reading serves and practice receives? Unfortunately, none of my training partners are doing serves I might encounter in matches.
When Anders Lind executes these drills makes it look easy! Let me tell you when i do it I got chicken fat!! Dripping out my pores with no quality in my strokes lol!!!! Falls apart after the third ball technique is out the freaking door in my journey in table tennis hahahaha!
Great video! I'd love to do more multiball training but it is hard to find people to do it with. Also I will be watching your match against Borussia Düsseldorf before christmas hopefully you will have a fantastic day!
It's hard at my club because multiball by practice-partners is not permitted. It is coaching/training and requires a paid trainer session. This can be expensive.
Hey Ander, can you tell Donic to produce your blade in penhold. Your blade is receiving great reviews and it's at a good price. Donic rubber is great but it's hard to find a good Donic blade to pair with it.
Hello anders do you think or have analize the model of training of left handlers of sweden like mikkael appelgren or jun misutani thanks por the video!!!
You should do this 5 times a week and do 2 times normal way with your practice partner. Multiball training is a key weapon to improve your consistency in your matches.
Hi Anders i just wanted to share some thoughts on this session with you. I often practise with Bastian Stegers father since we live very close to each other and he often tells very exciting stories. One thing I've noticed being mentioned very often is his critique of High level players only really doing very fast forehand topspins and not so much a very spinny and slower one (kind of like Timo), which leads to a change in rhythm mid game. Is this something that sees a lot of practise in your sessions? I've watched Timos matches in person a few times and the difference of his slow spinny topspins is very noticeable and you can clearly hear that he brushes the ball much finer than any other pro I've witnessed.
@mkwlukas9241 I agree with you 100% for me the reason I only practice fast is that I am very good at the slow one already but not so good in this fast game yet. But you're 100% correct that too many players think power and speed. Instead of spin and placement
Wow your success percentage was amazing until the (IMPOSSIBLE) Reaction Practice section! I'm knackered just watching on my TV😳 Will you keep using that coach? If not please send him to me🙏
Hey Anders, I really appreciate your work, I have been trying to find this kind of video for almost 2 years and especially about Chinese methods, so thanks for providing it. I also have small question: is it recommended to these exercises with multi ball or with the sparing partner? Thanks again👌👌🏓🏓
Hello, Anders. If opponent make long push what you advice? Make topspin before highest point - but it is very hard? Or just lift ball right after bounce?
I'm going to wear out my welcome commenting on everything, but if you practice extensively against a backboard (thin plywood) at the far end of the table, you can get very good at intercepting the ball at any point. Even if the push comes right to the edge, you can spin or fast loop or loop-kill right off the bounce. Or... take it late when it is well dropping. This can be devastating against an opponent. They will have no idea what's going to come. One player went back to his coach (or father?) yelling "I can't _stand_ how he plays!" He was getting 3rd-ball destroyed.
Saw it right now in the description. Are you really playing with C2 on both sides? Why not Bluestar? Thought this should be superior to C2 and that you play the A1. Would be great to hear the opinion for your choice and for whom it´s suited (maybe please include also Bluestorm pro / pro am (for you of course too soft) / z1 turbo). (At least for me the C2 was a big disappointment, while A1 / A2 for FH and A2 / A3 for BH were great)
@Mallgar I am indeed playing double c2. I like that it's super grip. But you also need good technique and power to actually get full use of the rubber. For most people I recommend on backhand bluestar a1 due to this
if you would play like this in the matches, you could actually become a top player, coz the shots you showed here were absolute top world class, a game and style you need to beat the best, coz your usual soft and chops here and there won't get those results except if the opponent is not present on this day, but with what you showe here, you could beat anyone at any given day...
Thanks for watching, everyone! I'll be posting a few videos around Christmas, so make sure to subscribe so you don’t miss them! 😊
I saw you come to Grenzau last Monday with four left-handers in your team and in this video with a left-handed playing coach now. Crazy!😆
Please do a video of your racket setup 🙂
Sir please make a video on your table tennis gip
🏓🏓🏓🏓🏓🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Happy advanced 26th birthday Anders! may your year be filled with more ITTF victories
Never congratulate anyone in advance ..
..Brings bad luck, even though it's superstitious, I think we don't need to wish happy birthday in advance, and any way, it's still not his day! No point;)
Your content is so good!! 100% agree with your take here. Multiball will also get you in physical shape very fast haha
I think the tt community would really benefit from more pros like you making this type of quality content so I hope you continue!!
@Looeelooee I will thanks 😁
@AnderslindTT 💯💯
Two youtube TT legends
Ayyy loooeeeloooee big up!
1. The game is generally won and lost in the serve & receive. 2. I am a highly licensed coach in multiple sports, and in every coaching course, no matter the sport, they teach you to train players with game-like drills. In TT, 2 things tend to separate top level amateurs and lowest level professionals. The first thing is the ability to play back heavy spin and speed consistently. Top level amateurs struggle against those fast + spinny shots. Lowest level pros do not struggle with them. The second thing is their anticipation and ability to get into position early. Top level amateurs tend to get caught flat-footed a lot. Lowest level pros tend to anticipate early and get into position early.
So, if you're an amateur, this sort of training will only get you halfway. You will need to master anticipation, and that will require a different type of training.
But, if you want to raise your game the most, then you should master your serve & receive game, as well as your anticipation + ability to get into position and attack the 3rd ball, attack or counterattack the 4th ball, and attack the 5th ball. Make all of your serves look EXACTLY the same too. Then, you will be able to fool your opponents with the spin. The way to make your serves look the same is by making contact on different parts of the ball. Other than that, your motion should look the same, regardless of spin.
If I could, I'd bookmark this comment )
@@workisgreat1 You could just screencap it
100% spot on
Thank you very much Anders Lind. I have learned a lot.
What did you learn? Your channel is fully AI anyway
@@GaoyuanFanboy123 about Chinese training, he actually has good content he uses ai cos voice recording is not convenient
So great to see your footwork so detailed!!! Favourite moment was for sure the "reaction practise" when the coach imitated your wobbeling around during the exercise XDDDDD
Little thing about the camera angle, it would be great to see the opposite side of the table to see the lenght of your shots, little thing, but maybe you could check this in future videos.
Love your content!
@@mojopa2201 noted. Will remember 😁
Thank you, Anders. I respect you so much for your way, your results, your self being
Always!
People that has never done this dont understand the level of stamina you need to keep this for 1 hour
I practiced at a greater intensity in the 60's with a (homemade) inverted rubber return-board* . Even the slowest pace was faster, and it was up to 4 drives/second. But it lacked the more real-world dynamic multiball (almost) emulates. One would think this did nothing to improve consistency in actually getting the ball back in a real game, but in practice warming up with players made no difference; relentless counterdriving.
This applied to normal opponents. Weird players, awkward serves, and long pips I could barely manage.
____
*placed at net-distance, not at the end. I had a number of return boards for different purposes: inverted rubber, masonite, pressed cardboard (short-range flicks vs short backspin returns), and a sheet of light plywood at the end of the table for chop-like backspin returns.
@@-danR No you didnt.
@@-danR dude... get a check asap. your head is rotting.
Best TH-cam channel for table tennis 😃
der kollege ging krass ab
@@BjoernSteltingTT thanks man😊
Nope, mine is better 🤣
One of the best, but near the top for inside look of higher-tier player's practice and mindset. Kanak Jha's is also shaping up to be like this.
I wish there were more of these channel's and fewer of the nobody-coach videos and their stuff like "easy way to return any serve", and "how to beat long-pips blockers".
The role of a coach in providing multi-ball training with various variations is very important. what is even more crucial and challenging is how to make it consistent and sustain it over the years, just like the Chinese players who have achieved such great success. Thank you, Anders, for sharing your knowledge through the video
Very intense training. But what's impressive is that even with the intensity you don't miss a lot!
@meou.1412 some rounds miss more but in general yeah cant miss too much if you wanna play top level 😁
Hello Anders!
Just a suggestion: would be great if you would keep the raw training audio without any music
I'm sure true fans would love the sound of the ball more than anything
Secondly, I recently saw a video where British international badminton players went to play in China and even the badminton training is way more intense than in Europe, and the Chinese pair mentioned that daily massages were a very important part of their routine to recover from all that training. Watching this video itself makes me tired so remembered this fact😁
Thank you so much for the high quality content!
@@virenkundnani5320 yeah china goes hard on all sports. It's awesome
I could do without the music track, but it's so thoughtfully low-volume that I have zero complaints.
@@AnderslindTT yup they leave nothing on the hard work side
Looks extremely intense, jeez. Good job!
The best table tennis channel. We are lucky to have a pro like you teaching us.
Great training!, you're a genius Anders!!
this is gold, Anders!
You are right on everything! Multi-balls in my opinion is the foundation of table tennis and it should always be part of the training but training at the table is equally important. When you reach a pro level then as you pointed it out training at the table is more important - ideally with different players!
Yeah pretty accurate 😁
Thanks for everything, what you are doing, and I'm happy that you're with us!
I'm glad you can play again!!
Hey Anders,
your video is really good and I liked it a lot. I am amazed by your technique. I wish you great success and hope for the best.
Cracking summary and boy oh boy that was quite a workout session... watched the cloudwalker playing in the chinese super league ... we're blessed ...these are fantastic times to be a tt fan. All the best all, over the festive period
Awesome Anders. It's also extremely demanding from a physical perspective. In 2015 - 2016 I had training sessions at the Borussia Düsseldorf and after each 2 hour training session I was TOTALLY rinsed. I was going back home to die in the sofa...
@freddupont9605 yep it's pretty tough physically. I am also dead after every multiball session
I recently went to düsseldorf and got one hour of multiball. At the end i was shaking
Thanks a for the advice Anders, I can definitely relate a lot because my training used to be multiball exclusively. I improved faster and my technique is generally better than most but my match play and adjusting during matches definitely suffered
@cgonzalezcon sounds good. Get some matches in and all will be good then😁
Thanks for the video really interesting as well as your final considerations. It's like seeing my muliball session just at 10x speed!😂 Thanks for being so nice to share this videos with us. Keep up!💪👍
Thanks for sharing with people, this particularly a great way of teaching, you are a very skillfull player, every video will be greatfully appreciated, please KEEP YOUR VIDEOS COMING UP 😊❤
Comparing this to my impression of your play ~2 years ago, is it possible that your footwork has improved immensely already? I'm glad to see you're doing what it takes to continue your ascendance and I hope to witness the results in 2025. Cheers!
I'd argue that perfecting your technique will allow better decision making during a match giving you that extra bit of confidence, or even put you in a position to do a shot you would not have tried otherwise. But then again I'm not a pro 😂 Love the vids dude, keep going!
@njinx_31 thanks a lot 😁
I would say his technique looks pretty solid to me already
Super nice content!! Good to get a great impression on the intensity needed to become a top player
I won't lie, at first I thought you looked boring and snobbish... but... I was completely wrong, today you are for me one of the best interesting players to follow and now I even root for you in games... unless you play against Hugo Calderano, because he is from my country 😁
Congratulations on the wonderful channel!!! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Thanks a lot mate 😂 good u changed ur mind about me haha😁
Very interesting insight, ty! For me, having done a lot of regular drills during my first 2 years of training, my biggest weakness is serve/receive. It´s so much harder to learn. If I get into the open game I can hang with much higher ranked players here and there, but tt is mainly first 3 balls, so yeah... I try to play more matches now, but the endless possibility´s make it very hard to improve.
Ditto.
Try to play with the timing on the receive and the serve. Try hitting the serve approximately at net height and not too early, otherwise it bounces too high and you don't get much spin on it.
For the receive, many players respond to under spin serves by taking the ball early after the bounce. Try to take them and pendulum serves with side spin/under spin a little bit later. Let somebody serve you the same serve a couple times and then play with your timing and practice a offensive answer (flip/topspin) and a defensive answer (short/half long push) and see what's comfortable for you. This is what helped me to make improvements when I was already playing for a while.
Oh, and one thing many people still miss. Your shots should have a purpose. Don't just serve and hope they can't attack it. Serve to their weaker side or to a spot that limits their answers to shots that benefit you. For example my backhand was stronger against under spin than my forehand, so I used a lot of pendulum serves to forehand and elbow of the opponent since it's hard for them to push to my forehand from there due to the sidepin.
Thank you for sharing !
Very useful to see your perfect movement !
🏓❤️
Very useful training! If I were younger I would like to have such a coach. Thank you for these beneficial exercises!
I lost my breath just watching this, a gruesome stamina test
What i like about multiball is when you're done, you know you did something 99% of the population never couldn't)) keep up the great content!
Great video yet again! Also, surprisingly funny the moment you ask "What do you want me to do?", hahaha. As a trainer, these are the funniest moments of giving multiball training. Good luck in upcoming events soon!
Lots of hard work! 💪👏
Great stuff, brother.
Interesting to see all the different drills and to get your insights. Multi-ball helps but isn’t everything.
@@Ejb2460 exactly🤩
Thank you so much for sharing your skills and for the very detailed explanation
Can you show us a tutorial on how to perfectly do the “ Counter Loop off'-the bounce”?
Intense! Btw i really like your videos
@ThomasWolff-x6o thanks a lot 😀
Not a huge fan of multiball training but when done right it can be very effective. And the multiball in this video is done really well.
But similar as training against a robot I feel it's more to learn performing strokes consistently than to learn to play matches.
In professional table tennis, multiball training is elementary and essential, as it brings the routine
@@gfdggdfgdgf yeah repetition and fast paced exercises are super important for top lvl
I think it's great, as long as the emphasis is on training, not 'coaching'. That's what I like about the coach in this video. He's not interrupting with useless chatter or stroke-demonstration. If there's a systematic error in stroke-production, it will get ironed out by... more stroke production.
Happy Birthday Anders 🎉🎉🎉
such good real world advice. Cheers Anders
Super amazing footwork~ 😍💜👍🏻👍🏻🏓💪🏻💪🏻
Thank you 🤗
I have learned a lot from your videos. Thank you~
Exhaustingly amazing.
Very!
Beautiful! @AnderslindTT is the best! 💪Could you please position the camera straight (not at an angle) so we can better see how the body should move in details?
Danish killing machine
Kom så Anders!!
Multiball session is good for reflex training
Amazing! Awesome brotha!
Great video. Thanks Ander
In my opinion, you have one of the best First counterattack on opponent spinny topspin
@biniismygod7798 thanks a lot 😊
That was bad ass!....I would have folded about 1/4 through the drill....
very good training Anders.
Wow, it certainly improves your stamina.
Without multiple ball sessions at 3x that time span x 4 days minimum per week, you will struggle physically to beat the Chinese, the Koreans, and the Japanese. It is super essential. Of course getting in record amount of games so as not to lose the natural game and match feel is crucial.
Very interesting. Thanks for sharing.
Happy birthday anders lind 🎉🙏🏼
1 of the most best backhand in the world❤
hohohoh! thanks for this! very valuable insight!
Good job,Keep going!!!🤩
Love your content
YESSSS new video 😊😊
It's especially good for young players to build the technique and patience. The best and most efficient trainings are the most boring ones. That's why Chinese are so good fundamentally. They do a lot of same boring and exhausting thing until they master it. It builds the discipline very well.
Super helpful
I love your game so much because you can play so weird but you also can play like a mashine. You are my idol
Anders please make a video about your new blade, I've just got it and it's awesome💪🏓
I will!😊
@@AnderslindTTyeah, I found Very particular, Very unique. Top layer koto we can see on manu baldes like TB, Viscaria. But, below koto, there is limba, which turns unique.
The only similar Blade I found was the old Hayabusa zi from Xiom. (I think is relaunching this séries).
This koto-limba inner carbon makes me think that the rationale of the Blade is to build a piece that is faster than Apolónia, with less vibration to keep stability. And also, enhance Sweet spot and tô activate speed even with small or improvised swings. And ALL of these, without losing the versatility that a talent player needs tô do creative shots, trickshot. (Do not lose the feeling shots).
@@AnderslindTTanother perspective (and simpler) to analyze the Blade is: as per many many Blade are composed of koto, ALC. Limba, Kiri core, the rationale of your blade is that they wanted to makes a INNER version of Timo Boll/ChuanChiYuan2013/Kenta/Viscaria/FanZhendong/ZhanJike/ZhouYu3/TreiberK/LinGaoYuan
4:42 I'm a lefty penholder and my forehand is my best shot. It tends to go cross court and I probably loop around the side of the ball a little more than most people. The ball has some side kick off the bounce but I'd like your thoughts on doing this inside-out forehand. I find if one always expects my loop to go cross-court, it's easier to block. What do you think about when looping either inside-out or down the line. The table is shorter there compared to cross-court and I find it easy to loop this ball long. Do you bend or flare your hand back to brush the back right of the ball as a shakehander in this shot? Do you execute this shot with ever so slight less power as compared to cross-court to allow the ball enough time to curve down since the table is shorter? I can do it with penhold but the natural part of the grip (try it. put the blade in your wrist and bend your wrist back) does make it harder I think to fade the shot out wide. Any tips or thoughts would be appreciated. thanks.
Interesting that you missed more going from slow to fast than from fast to slow, I'm the complete opposite so often when someone takes all the pace off the ball I go too early and hit a donkey 😅, really nice how you patiently wait for the ball then go
@GuoJing2017 in match is opposite for me too. I miss much more fast to slow 😅
Can you do a review on your own blade that just came out? That would be Cool.
I will😊
how can world class rank give the secret training
thx u sir for lot of golden share
Bravo and long life Anders Lind
Hi Anders, thank you for this informative video. But I'm asking myself what would be the best way to practice reading serves and practice receives? Unfortunately, none of my training partners are doing serves I might encounter in matches.
@@SkyKaiZ then it's difficult. Not sure how to improve then. I guess keep trying in matches and eventually will improve them
Guys I love Lind chocolate 🍫🙌
You are wrong! "Lindh" chocolate!
@tomtrana3449 na Lindt 😅
@@tomtrana3449you are wrong. 'Lindh' is a bronze medalist in Seul 88 and 3x wttc teams' champion.
When Anders Lind executes these drills makes it look easy! Let me tell you when i do it I got chicken fat!! Dripping out my pores with no quality in my strokes lol!!!! Falls apart after the third ball technique is out the freaking door in my journey in table tennis hahahaha!
Great video! I'd love to do more multiball training but it is hard to find people to do it with. Also I will be watching your match against Borussia Düsseldorf before christmas hopefully you will have a fantastic day!
@@janreichelt1848 awesome. Come say hi🤩
It's hard at my club because multiball by practice-partners is not permitted. It is coaching/training and requires a paid trainer session. This can be expensive.
very clean technique even for pros
Hey Ander, can you tell Donic to produce your blade in penhold. Your blade is receiving great reviews and it's at a good price. Donic rubber is great but it's hard to find a good Donic blade to pair with it.
Hello anders do you think or have analize the model of training of left handlers of sweden like mikkael appelgren or jun misutani thanks por the video!!!
That leads me to ask: what is the European way to practice? A video on that would be great so we can see the difference.
You should do this 5 times a week and do 2 times normal way with your practice partner. Multiball training is a key weapon to improve your consistency in your matches.
Amazing!
Hello made anders hope you are doing well
Can you make a video about your strength training
Hi Anders i just wanted to share some thoughts on this session with you. I often practise with Bastian Stegers father since we live very close to each other and he often tells very exciting stories. One thing I've noticed being mentioned very often is his critique of High level players only really doing very fast forehand topspins and not so much a very spinny and slower one (kind of like Timo), which leads to a change in rhythm mid game. Is this something that sees a lot of practise in your sessions? I've watched Timos matches in person a few times and the difference of his slow spinny topspins is very noticeable and you can clearly hear that he brushes the ball much finer than any other pro I've witnessed.
@mkwlukas9241 I agree with you 100% for me the reason I only practice fast is that I am very good at the slow one already but not so good in this fast game yet. But you're 100% correct that too many players think power and speed. Instead of spin and placement
Wow your success percentage was amazing until the (IMPOSSIBLE) Reaction Practice section! I'm knackered just watching on my TV😳
Will you keep using that coach? If not please send him to me🙏
@Colonel-Mustard I hope to continue with him yes 😁 so no can do. He is mine🤣😛
Will take some of these drills and use my robot as best I can. But very good point about matchcraft. Only one way to learn that.
@@Thisonegoestoeleven666 go for it 🤩
Hey Anders, I really appreciate your work, I have been trying to find this kind of video for almost 2 years and especially about Chinese methods, so thanks for providing it. I also have small question: is it recommended to these exercises with multi ball or with the sparing partner?
Thanks again👌👌🏓🏓
Depends on your goal. If you want to be faster multiball. If you want to get better decision making in each shot play with partner.
Hello, Anders. If opponent make long push what you advice? Make topspin before highest point - but it is very hard? Or just lift ball right after bounce?
@@Человекмира-у8с on highest point or after it fall a little. Never before
I'm going to wear out my welcome commenting on everything, but if you practice extensively against a backboard (thin plywood) at the far end of the table, you can get very good at intercepting the ball at any point. Even if the push comes right to the edge, you can spin or fast loop or loop-kill right off the bounce. Or... take it late when it is well dropping.
This can be devastating against an opponent. They will have no idea what's going to come. One player went back to his coach (or father?) yelling "I can't _stand_ how he plays!" He was getting 3rd-ball destroyed.
@@AnderslindTT but push long and and I'll have to move back
Awesome post
Müthiş antrenman. Tebrikler❤
Are you thinking about placement when you do multiball random full table?
great!
Why not alternate between this session and a more match-based, receive and service session ?
That is what I do😄
How do i improve in movement though, i feel like my legs stick to the ground
Sir What rubber of fh n bh?
Donic Bluegrip c2 both sides
7:32 gave me a good laugh
what model of shoes are these?
What was that shot at 8 30
Sindssyg træning 🤣godt for kondien.
@@Allanwify jeps. Min kondi er fkin lort så det er win win den her slags træning for mig 🤣
@@AnderslindTT haha vi glæder os til at se dig i superform. :-D
Saw it right now in the description.
Are you really playing with C2 on both sides?
Why not Bluestar? Thought this should be superior to C2 and that you play the A1.
Would be great to hear the opinion for your choice and for whom it´s suited (maybe please include also Bluestorm pro / pro am (for you of course too soft) / z1 turbo).
(At least for me the C2 was a big disappointment, while A1 / A2 for FH and A2 / A3 for BH were great)
@Mallgar I am indeed playing double c2. I like that it's super grip. But you also need good technique and power to actually get full use of the rubber. For most people I recommend on backhand bluestar a1 due to this
... Once or twice a week?😢
I'd love to.
if you would play like this in the matches, you could actually become a top player, coz the shots you showed here were absolute top world class, a game and style you need to beat the best, coz your usual soft and chops here and there won't get those results except if the opponent is not present on this day, but with what you showe here, you could beat anyone at any given day...
Happy Birthday