LMTLS.
LMTLS.
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ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 22
Welcome to the Limittless channel!
In this video series you will follow Andreas on his path to 1550TTR points and becoming a better table tennis player. He will update you every Wednesday and Sunday, so make sure to subscribe and turn on the notification bell.
Limittless will provide you with finest Table Tennis content:
- Mathias journey as a pro player for the 1.FC Saarbrücken Table Tennis club.
- Andreas Road to 1550TTR points.
- Match analyses.
- Technique videos.
- Pro player appearances, and more...
Want to get better at table tennis fast? Check out our instructional here: limittless.funnelcockpit.com/
follow us on instagram: lmtls.tt
contact us: info@limittless.de
Переглядів: 262

Відео

ROAD TO 1550 TTR Week 21 Part 2
Переглядів 45519 годин тому
Welcome to the Limittless channel! In this video series you will follow Andreas on his path to 1550TTR points and becoming a better table tennis player. He will update you every Wednesday and Sunday, so make sure to subscribe and turn on the notification bell. Limittless will provide you with finest Table Tennis content: - Mathias journey as a pro player for the 1.FC Saarbrücken Table Tennis cl...
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 21 Part 1
Переглядів 98014 днів тому
Welcome to the Limittless channel! In this video series you will follow Andreas on his path to 1550TTR points and becoming a better table tennis player. He will update you every Wednesday and Sunday, so make sure to subscribe and turn on the notification bell. Limittless will provide you with finest Table Tennis content: - Mathias journey as a pro player for the 1.FC Saarbrücken Table Tennis cl...
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 20 Part 1
Переглядів 71921 день тому
Welcome to the Limittless channel! In this video series you will follow Andreas on his path to 1550TTR points and becoming a better table tennis player. He will update you every Wednesday and Sunday, so make sure to subscribe and turn on the notification bell. Limittless will provide you with finest Table Tennis content: - Mathias journey as a pro player for the 1.FC Saarbrücken Table Tennis cl...
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 20 STC CUP
Переглядів 80228 днів тому
Welcome to the Limittless channel! In this video series you will follow Andreas on his path to 1550TTR points and becoming a better table tennis player. He will update you every Wednesday and Sunday, so make sure to subscribe and turn on the notification bell. Limittless will provide you with finest Table Tennis content: - Mathias journey as a pro player for the 1.FC Saarbrücken Table Tennis cl...
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 19 STC CUP
Переглядів 2,2 тис.Місяць тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 19 STC CUP
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 19 Tournament Part 2
Переглядів 1,1 тис.Місяць тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 19 Tournament Part 2
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 19 Tournament
Переглядів 1 тис.Місяць тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 19 Tournament
ROAD TO 1550 TTR Week 19 Part 1
Переглядів 1,3 тис.Місяць тому
ROAD TO 1550 TTR Week 19 Part 1
I played a table tennis tournament …in Japan
Переглядів 2,9 тис.Місяць тому
I played a table tennis tournament …in Japan
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 18 Tournament Part 2
Переглядів 630Місяць тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 18 Tournament Part 2
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 18 Tournament Part 1
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ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 18 Tournament Part 1
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 18 Part 2
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ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 18 Part 2
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 18 Part 1
Переглядів 770Місяць тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 18 Part 1
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 17 Part 3
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ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 17 Part 3
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 17 Part 2
Переглядів 767Місяць тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 17 Part 2
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 17 Part 1
Переглядів 693Місяць тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 17 Part 1
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 16 STC CUP MATCH 2 and 3
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ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 16 STC CUP MATCH 2 and 3
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 16 STC CUP MATCH 1
Переглядів 1,2 тис.Місяць тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 16 STC CUP MATCH 1
ROAD TO 1550TR Week 16 Part 2
Переглядів 8342 місяці тому
ROAD TO 1550TR Week 16 Part 2
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 16 Part 1
Переглядів 1,2 тис.2 місяці тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 16 Part 1
Practice with Yuto Muramatsu + long serve tactics - Road as a pro EP.7
Переглядів 3,2 тис.2 місяці тому
Practice with Yuto Muramatsu long serve tactics - Road as a pro EP.7
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week15 Part 4
Переглядів 1,6 тис.2 місяці тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week15 Part 4
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 15 Part 3
Переглядів 1 тис.2 місяці тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 15 Part 3
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 15 Part 2
Переглядів 1 тис.2 місяці тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 15 Part 2
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 15 Part 1
Переглядів 1,1 тис.2 місяці тому
ROAD TO 1550TTR Week 15 Part 1
ROAD TO 1550 TTR Week 14 Tournament
Переглядів 8992 місяці тому
ROAD TO 1550 TTR Week 14 Tournament
Pro player explains the basics of the receive
Переглядів 3,4 тис.2 місяці тому
Pro player explains the basics of the receive
ROAD TO 1550 TTR Week 14 Part 3
Переглядів 1,8 тис.2 місяці тому
ROAD TO 1550 TTR Week 14 Part 3
ROAD TO 1550 TTR Week 14 Part 2
Переглядів 2,2 тис.2 місяці тому
ROAD TO 1550 TTR Week 14 Part 2

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @Blackain66
    @Blackain66 День тому

    zu aller erst: mehr denn je VIEL ZU LEISE !!! (guck mal das du das auf normale UA-cam/Stream Laustärke bekommst, zur Not auch gegen nen Limiter aufdrehen, ich hab am Anfang wirklich gar nichts gehört..) Ansonsten siehts solide aus und wird immer besser. Bezüglich RH parallel, ist halt selbst bis zur TTBL hin der schwerste/riskanteste Schlag, zumindest wenn du n Topspin mit ner guten Qualität (Spin/Speed) spielen willst. Wenns nicht gerade ein Linkshänder oder Rh-starker-Spieler ist, ist es das Risiko oft nicht wert, da lieber hart diagonal durchziehen und mehr Trefferfläche / bessere Trefferquote haben. Down-the-line ist halt eher dann geil wenn dein Gegner zu tief in der RH steht oder nicht damit rechnet. RH Open-Up sieht gut aus, VH Loop gegen Backspin ist am Anfang des Videos eher mittelmäßig, je fester du spielen willst umsomehr Kurve aka Spin brauchst du auch. Mein VH Loop ist brutal und meistens ein Winner auf diesem Level ~1600 und ich gehe aber auch voll rein und ziehe noch mehr mehr Spin, die Geschwindigkeit kommt dann durch die Power / Körperrotation usw und ich habe trotzdem sehr gute Sicherheit durch die gute Flugkurve. An deiner Stelle würde ich mich auch noch etwas mehr drauf fokussieren in der Rally jeden einzelnen Schuss mit guter Qualität zu spielen, da sind öfter einige sehr passive zu lockere Drives drin bei denen gute Gegner dann direkt Gegenziehen und übernehmen.

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. День тому

      @@Blackain66 jo wie gesagt vids sind vorproduziert, sollte bald besser sein. Mit der parallelen rh hast du natürlich recht, dennoch entwickelt es sich bei mir grad dahin da ich auch immer mehr rh flippe. Das größte Thema ist und bleibt die Lockerheit bei mir. Je lockerer ich spiele und je länger ich das auch in der Rallye bis zum Schluss halten kann desto besser. Dadurch wird auch alles andere massiv besser oder eben schlechter. Kann man nicht nachvollziehen wenn man das nicht jahrelang genau anders eintrainiert hat. Das ist deshalb die absolute Priorität und da liegt der größte benefit. Den Rest trainiere ich ja sowieso. Es geht weiter vorwärts und ich merke wie ich mich stetig immer weiter verbessere. Sollte ich es schaffen locker zu werden und die Bälle mit guter Technik voll durch zu peitschen wird es richtig geil. Manchmal gelingt das hier und da schon vereinzelt. Daran sehe ich was das für ein immenser unterschied in der Qualität und Sicherheit ist. Durch das lockerer bleiben wird auch die Beinarbeit besser, einfach alles. Natürlich ist nicht alles schlecht an meiner Körperspannung, aber sie steht mir definitiv mehr im Weg immer noch. Heute geht es los mit der Runde, mal sehen wie es läuft.

    • @skakollaettklipp
      @skakollaettklipp День тому

      @@limittless. All of us older players have a baggage from other trainings. I hadn't touch a table tennis bat for 30 years when I did my comeback and my struggle is FH openings. BH works, sometimes really well, but FH against backspin serves is a struggle. I follow your struggle and as you say, most important is the progress. Sometiems it is like a stair, you reach a plateu and then next step up!

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. 23 години тому

      @@skakollaettklipp yes, backhand was way easier for me as well from the beginning. And also forehand topspin vs backspin was the biggest problem. Simply because backhand almost only required wrist and a little body plus the body tension that you probably have anyways. Forehand instead is a whole chain of muscles and body areas that need to work together as one. This is extremely challenging because only one part of the chain is enough to ruin everything.

  • @rayzer7129
    @rayzer7129 4 дні тому

    Wer machte die Aufnahmen?

  • @danielrenaud4639
    @danielrenaud4639 6 днів тому

    Great teaching and great attitude of the coach 😊

  • @danielrenaud4639
    @danielrenaud4639 6 днів тому

    Nice thank you 🎉

  • @JOOHATVJIYU
    @JOOHATVJIYU 8 днів тому

    Good🎉👍

  • @BiscoWho
    @BiscoWho 10 днів тому

    Anyone (roughly) above the mid-level amateurs is going to be excellent at hitting your long serves. This is exactly what I have been trying to tell you for a while now.

  • @nextlvlng
    @nextlvlng 12 днів тому

    The ladies in your video series look absurdly technically sound and play really strong counters.

  • @paddle_smith
    @paddle_smith 13 днів тому

    That floor looks really slippery

  • @lutz18692
    @lutz18692 13 днів тому

    Honestly these rallies are more attractive to watch than most of the 1600-1700 matches from the German league on that other YT channel. Really makes you wonder how comparable TTR is between leagues or regions.

    • @Blackain66
      @Blackain66 13 днів тому

      Longer open rallies are always more fun to watch for the untrained eye yes. However in a real match that matters good shot and tactics are more interesting to someone who knows well. You can have open rallies on all TTR from 1300-2700 and they will just be more slow which is the case here too. On a 1700 rally shots are played much harder on every opportunity, even thou they have some solid fast shots here and there.

  • @nimakh5176
    @nimakh5176 13 днів тому

    I think you need a new pair of shoes. You can get a cheap but good pair from AliExpress, but change those shoes please. You're just waiting for disaster to happen.

  • @triplebig
    @triplebig 13 днів тому

    no one ever corrected my grip until recently. I defaulted into a backhand grip for some reason, so now Im having to readjust and this switch kills me too. Do you have any tips for what a good forehand grip should feel like? How do you know your grip is correct?

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. 13 днів тому

      @@triplebig So, I still struggle with this but it got a lot better very quickly. Here is why: 1. I focus a lot on a loose grip at all times, that changes everything because the grip switch is easier and faster. 2. I do drills with just the racket. Switching between forehand and backhand grip very fast and very relaxed, I do it during training sessions and games, basically all the time. Still my forehand grip is very high and the middle finger is involved way too much most of the time. Also worst cast still happens, which is a heavy backhand grip with thumb pressed at the backhand side while playing forehand 😅. But I am definitely happy that I found a fast cure for the most part in keeping a loose grip. I think correct forehand grip is index finger at the bottom of the rubber and thumb toward the handle, between handle and rubber I’d say. The other 3 fingers should do almost nothing and rest at the handle. But definitely check out other people’s advice too, that’s just what I was told and hopefully remember correctly 😉

    • @Blackain66
      @Blackain66 13 днів тому

      ​@@limittless.Zhang Jike did say it's better to no get into an extreme bh grip with thumb beeing straight on the rubber, it should always contact it on the inner side and on the left of the handle and not directly above I guess that helps switching to FH grip a lot too

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. 13 днів тому

      @@Blackain66 that is something i thought about recently during practice. seems logica, my bh grip is very heavy.

    • @triplebig
      @triplebig 12 днів тому

      Thanks for the tips!!

  • @alexandrosbest736
    @alexandrosbest736 13 днів тому

    Do you find it difficult to play on this surface? It looks like you are sliding a lot. Your opponents are sliding a little too but they look much more stable when hitting and moving.

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. 13 днів тому

      @@alexandrosbest736 yeah no problem, most surfaces here are like that

    • @cebukajp
      @cebukajp 11 днів тому

      its happening when u have a lot of dust on your shoes, wet towel helps a lot, u are sliding way too much to be honest

  • @benstrutz606
    @benstrutz606 15 днів тому

    I like your loop against backspin but a thing that works really well for me when I do it is to vary when you contact the ball to vary the spin/speed. If you contact it at top of the bounce it's fast but not as much speed but if u let it drop a bit it's slower and higher but a lot spinner. If you vary these two types of loop it will make it a lot harder for opponents to return them and if they do you will have a high ball to kill.

  • @armanalbrecht1889
    @armanalbrecht1889 15 днів тому

    The guy in the red seems to be in the moment.

  • @danielrenaud4639
    @danielrenaud4639 17 днів тому

    Nice 😊 thanks friend 🏓💡

  • @verysmellygarlic
    @verysmellygarlic 18 днів тому

    Mariann Domonkos says that with excellent timing one can play fast and powerful with minimal effort and with small bat angle adjustments to incoming spin. She teaches that with good timing one does not need to do big topspin hand and body movements. I find that my loop movement are exaggerated and I lose time to prepare for the next shot. You might find it interesting. Its a bit long but full of gold nuggets. ua-cam.com/video/8cew8302Eic/v-deo.html

  • @BiscoWho
    @BiscoWho 20 днів тому

    You want to get BETTER, right? That's your whole goal overall, is it not? Well then, you NEED to stop serving long with topspin and sidespin all the time. Those serves should be MAYBE 10-15% of your serves overall. The rest need to be short, with varied underspin, sidespin, and even no spin. You will not get past a certain level, if you serve long with topspin all the time, like you do. I have said this multiple times before. It doesn't matter if you get everything else up to TOP professional level. If you serve like that, you're going to get SLAUGHTERED. If everything were top professional level and you served like that, your overall level would be midrange amateur. I promise you! That's how much damage you are doing to yourself. I don't know who told you to serve long like that all the time. But, they didn't have a clue about table tennis. I would LOVE to play a match against you just to show you what I mean. I am just a low-level professional. But, I will put you on the defensive on every single serve, if you serve like that. And I will probably outright win a lot of free points like that as well. And you will see that I don't even have to try in order to do so. And it's not because "I'm so good", or something like that. It's entirely because you're giving me the opportunity TO ATTACK FIRST over and over again. And even at the mid-to-higher levels of amateur play, attacking FIRST, regardless of how good the attack is, is extremely important, and you need to be the one attacking first more of the time, if you want to give yourself the best chance to win. Serving like that will have them attacking first way more often than you, and you will lose because of it. They're not going to serve it long to you like that over and over. They're going to serve it short, low, and with different variations of spins. And you're going to be having to push a lot, which means that they'll be getting to attack first on their serves most of the time. Then, when they're receiving you are just going to keep giving them the chance to attack on their receives. Doesn't that sound pretty stupid to you?

    • @BigJ1510
      @BigJ1510 19 днів тому

      Wow, what a tone.... even if you're not entirely wrong about the content. But I would prefer half-long (2 table touches or the 2nd just behind the baseline). Much more difficult to flip. The most important thing is that the balls come low over the net.

    • @BiscoWho
      @BiscoWho 19 днів тому

      @BigJ1510 Everybody prefers half-long serves. However, I am taking his level and his particular skills into account. If he were to skip right to trying half-long serves, he would find himself giving up serves that are too deep way too often and that becomes a meatball for opponents. That's why he should learn how to serve short, low, and with underspin on the ball first. Once he masters that, then he will already have a good grasp on controlling the distance and serving half-longs. Also, at his level, nobody is consistently serving half-longs anyway. At that level, being consistent with getting the first attack on his own service points will be a major advantage. And above all, just changing to serving short, low, and with underspin at least 80% of the time will DRAMATICALLY increase his level. It's currently holding him back in a big way. Most people will not realise this. But, any decent coach who has at least coached at the highest amateur levels will see this for sure. It is plain as day. And in my spare time I'm actually cutting together a supercut of how many points he has given away because of his long serves in just the past few weeks of videos or so. I need to demonstrate how detrimental it is to him. I'm also cutting together a supercut of him giving away points by playing forehand attacks right to where the opponent is standing and not to the far forehand corner (when playing a righty). In that supercut, I'm also showing the points he wins simply because he plays the forehand attack to that far forehand corner. It's just taking some time. I train 6 days a week for 6 hours per day, and I coach professionals as well as amateurs from mid-level to the highest level. So, time is difficult to find.

    • @BigJ1510
      @BigJ1510 19 днів тому

      @@BiscoWho Maybe you shoul ask him if he want to have your demonstration before you give a non-asked advice / investigate a lot of time. Short serves often lead to short returns, and you have to be able to deal with that. For me, the most important thing is that the serves are flat. And as you see in this video he makes progression with the parallel serves.

  • @ralfs.gutmanis
    @ralfs.gutmanis 20 днів тому

    Background noise is way too loud. Cannot hear and understand your voice over gameplay noise

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. 20 днів тому

      @@ralfs.gutmanis will be fixed for future episodes but be like this for a few more, sry

  • @michel4500
    @michel4500 20 днів тому

    I hope you didn't lose against the teenage looking guy Fabi who can't do a proper Schupfball ;)

  • @Blackain66
    @Blackain66 20 днів тому

    Guter Start, schöne feste Topspins gerade am Anfang. Da siehste auch direkt den Unterschied ob der erste direkt fest ist und der Gegner damit zwangsläufig Probleme hat wo er noch nah im Tisch steht vs wenn er die ersten leicht bekommt und dann schon etwas weiter hinten bereit steht wie Thomas und dann zumindest bei deiner aktuellen Härte dann die Topspins aus der Halbdistanz ganz gut bekommen kann. Mit Fabi am Ende sieht man was mit langen Angaben früher oder später passiert je höher man kommt. Sie müssen schon überraschend und unangenehm sein damit es keine Vorlagen sind. Andersherum sind seine Angaben oft auch "lang" und diese kannst du natürlich kaum kurzlegen, selbst wenn du sie gut liest geht dein Schupf dann rüber und gibt ihm immer einen 3rd Ball Attack. Da dann auch mal gucken die etwas fester anzugreifen um das zu unterbinden oder halt unangenehm platzieren. Oft haben Spieler mit solchen variablen Angaben auch mal weniger Unterschnitt drin und warten dann auch den hohen passiven Schupf, da dann auch mal drauf gehen und flicken wenn sie kurz sind damit sie es nicht zu leicht haben mit ihrem 3rd Ball.

  • @wilkinru
    @wilkinru 20 днів тому

    The point at 1:08 is going to win you matches. That's the ticket to your 1550TTR.

  • @skakollaettklipp
    @skakollaettklipp 21 день тому

    I will take full credit that you are serving short now and send an invoice. ;-) (Since I wrote that in my last comment to you I believe..?)

    • @wilkinru
      @wilkinru 20 днів тому

      I've been telling him that for weeks!

    • @skakollaettklipp
      @skakollaettklipp 20 днів тому

      @@wilkinru We can share the money when he wins ITTF in Dubai 2026! That pro-table tennis player Mattias is sacked as from today!

    • @wilkinru
      @wilkinru 20 днів тому

      @@skakollaettklipp Deal!

    • @BiscoWho
      @BiscoWho 20 днів тому

      ​@wilkinru Well chaps, I have been explaining it in detail to him for MONTHS AND MONTHS (No joke).

    • @skakollaettklipp
      @skakollaettklipp 20 днів тому

      @@BiscoWho I read and answered one of your posts Bisco. It was a long post you wrote but interesting stuff.

  • @quebqueb7225
    @quebqueb7225 22 дні тому

    Yo tell them to toss the ball higher wtf

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. 21 день тому

      @@quebqueb7225 forget it, Standard in these leagues

  • @verysmellygarlic
    @verysmellygarlic 24 дні тому

    I want to add what I read from the book SPIN from coach Tom Lodziak. Against opponents who block he recommends 1. Attach down the line: The blocker is used to crosscourt shots. Make it more difficult to him by attacking down the line 2. Attck the elbow position with speed 3. Vary the spin and speed of your shots

  • @BiscoWho
    @BiscoWho 27 днів тому

    There's no such thing as "playing controlled". What you mean is that you "played tentatively", which is the WORST way to play.

  • @BiscoWho
    @BiscoWho 27 днів тому

    Why do you miss the forehands? Here's EXACTLY why (and if anyone else tells you differently, they're either lying, or they don't know what they're talking about): The first reason is because you don't backswing your arm right behind your right knee. Secondly, you don't allow your arm to move freely and loosely, especially at the elbow and in your fingers. Thirdly, you're going for brush at times that you need to just smack the crap out of the ball. Fourthly, you're trying to make contact way too high on the ball. Fifthly, you're always aiming either down the middle, or right to their backhand side with the forehand when your first target should always be their far forehand corner (if they're a righty). If you aim to their far forehand corner, then your racket will come through the ball. Sixthly, you are not understanding that you're not trying to loop in those scenarios, and that you are trying to DRIVE instead. Driving means that you go a lot more FORWARD and THROUGH the ball. It also means that you take a bigger backswing (all the way back right behind your right knee) and that you focus on generating as much racket-head speed as you can, which requires loosening your entire arm and your grip throughout the entire shot. You also need to follow-through a bit more on those drives too. But again, you should be aiming for that diagonal corner aka their far forehand corner and not their backhand corner. You're always hitting it to their backhand corners with your forehand attacks. All they have to do is just put their racket in the way and they'll block it easily because THEY DON'T EVEN HAVE TO MOVE. You're supposed to attack to the other corner because that's where they'll need to move the greatest distance to get to the ball, because that's where the correct technique is going to be most natural for you to hit a hard drive to, and because it's either going to win you the point immediately or put you in full control of the point to where they can't block or counterattack you back.

    • @sebastianjo752
      @sebastianjo752 27 днів тому

      I can back that, on your forehand you don't use your elbow and wrist at all.

  • @danielrenaud4639
    @danielrenaud4639 27 днів тому

    Thank you for your videos 😊 U r very dedicated ! Enjoy 🎉

  • @pzinczak
    @pzinczak 27 днів тому

    you are missing a lot of shots on forehand because you are moving your hand way to slow, like you want to control the power by stopping your movement. You should use more force from legs and body and let the hand end the movement.

  • @bahadratay6532
    @bahadratay6532 27 днів тому

    I play for 6 years and I miss a lot too. From my personal observations from watching others, the main reason is misreading the spin on the ball. I miss when the ball is with more backspin then I expected, the ball comes later to the contact point then I calculated. Also I have a lot of top edge of the racket mostly at kick serves, which I think they are no spin or backspin, because ball jumps forward after hitting my side of the table. The solution is watching the ball a little longer to read the spin correctly. I dont have robot but with a robot which can make top and under spin randomly may help to develop watching the ball longer skills.

  • @jonathanrauhut3054
    @jonathanrauhut3054 27 днів тому

    why you did not show us your match, which you won in 5th set against a 1300 rated player?

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. 27 днів тому

      @@jonathanrauhut3054 not recorded

  • @kenji2787
    @kenji2787 27 днів тому

    I’m in the exact same boat. I was destroyed by a much higher level pimple player and now I keep missing balls. It’s frustrating. Friends who started later and is much lower level than me don’t have these problem. I asked coaches and people and all of them just tell me to “watch the ball” or learn to predict where the ball bounces better. I think there’s a different problem here. Please let me know if you figure it out.

    • @michikatsutsugikuni3098
      @michikatsutsugikuni3098 27 днів тому

      The problem is probably your footwork, you expect the ball to be at a certain point but it doesn't arrive there and you're too slow or too lazy (I'm the latter) to move your feet so that you have the correct hitting point. Also, a problem could be that your topspin/smash is too fixed on one movement, and isn't variable. That's actually the problem with a lot of players. They just learn that you need to hit it with a moderately extended forearm in front of your body, and also your racket should at the end of the movement always be in front of your head. That's not right. The players often fear getting out of the theory, and improvising. In some kind of situations, you need to extend your forearm a bit more, if you can't get into the best position in time. For me, most of it comes from intuition, which not everyone can directly learn or at least in a few weeks. And lastly, another point which is also related to both is that your footwork is that for fast topspin balls, you need to move your entire body into the ball. If the ball comes into your middle/backhand, mid to high, and you want to do a forehand, you need to, before the ball arrives, take a step back (not much, just a little step), then, rotate your body including your feet a bit to the right, while going a little step to the left, and then, take a moderate to big step with your left foot, moving into the ball with both your body and racket. If it's into the middle/forehand, you need to go into your normal position with your legs, though I'd advise you to stand a little wider, that gives you more room, makes you able to move faster, and also doesn't restrict your movements. Then, you also, at least if the ball comes very long, need to keep at least a little distance from the table, so that you have more time, and more space to move into. When the ball comes, also try to extend your forearm a bit more, and as with the last one, really hit into the ball, and focus on that, instead of just executing your topspin movement. You also need to move forward, although not as much as with the previous one, instead of moving to the side. if anything, move to the right side of the table (ofc this is as a right hander), though really not much, like just a tiny bit, and focus on moving forward. If the ball comes long into the forehand, smashing is a bit hard, but you need to move to the right, taking a rather big step with your right leg, and also move into the table. So most important things: Move into the ball, extend your forearm a little more, really hit the ball instead of going over it, and the ball also, which I didn't exactly say, should be to the right of your leg. The perfect position is if it's like right above your knee (obviously not directly but above and infront). Lastly, some of these may not work directly, you just need to try it out and adjust the hardness, but if you have problems visualizing all of this, I'd recommend this video by pech pong tt to you :ua-cam.com/video/lJKOdQ05qUw/v-deo.html. It's basically about how to exactly move for the balls you're missing, which is very likely your major problem.

    • @kenji2787
      @kenji2787 27 днів тому

      @michikatsutsugikuni3098 thanks. I agree that it’s probably the most obvious reason and I’m actively trying to fix it by watching the ball and slowing down as much as possible. However, the problem starts when I played that chopper dude and it moved on to everybody that even intermediate beginner players don’t miss those balls. The software engineer in me thinks that the root cause lies somewhere else. It is definitely not my footwork because that’s the only thing that’s carrying my terrible skill. People at my club, no matter how high, are all saying I’m annoyingly quick and covering the whole table.

    • @kenji2787
      @kenji2787 27 днів тому

      Also wanted to add, I can play backhand only or forehand only (not even using other side for blocking) against someone who could take some games off me when I use both side, and still win.

    • @michikatsutsugikuni3098
      @michikatsutsugikuni3098 27 днів тому

      @@kenji2787 Well the thing is you may be good at covering the table, which is obviously very important as well, but it could be the direct position of your feet, and how you move when in or just before contact with the ball. The problem is that I don't directly know your situation, how exactly you move or how the shots of the opponents are. All I can say is that the problem of the person in the video is his forearm, and that he didn't move into the ball enough, but rather just executed his topspin movement while not paying enough attention to his exact position and distance from the ball.

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. 27 днів тому

      @@michikatsutsugikuni3098 thanks for all the advice. It’s in fact the case that if I play weird playing styles and/or rubbers my whole rhythm breaks. I can hang with people that play way longer than me already if they play “proper” table tennis. But as soon as the physics change for whatever reason things change dramatically. My footwork becomes non existent and I tense up like crazy and that leads into a mindset problems as well. So a perfect negative spiral, it’s crazy. That being said, I play 10x better if I manage to stay loose, both mentally and physically. My movement is completely different if I achieve that.

  • @skakollaettklipp
    @skakollaettklipp 28 днів тому

    You have played a lot, if you miss forehand topspin it could be that the rubber has started to wear out?

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. 27 днів тому

      @@skakollaettklipp no, I replace them often 😅

  • @Blackain66
    @Blackain66 28 днів тому

    Volume ist besser hier aber könnte auch noch etwas lauter. Sieht gut aus soweit, TTR Angaben fehlen hier allerdings was es noch etwas spannender machen würde. Was die VH Misses angeht, das liegt daran das der Ball gegen Material (oder bei krummen Bällen) anders springt: A) der Ball ist durch Material langsamer als man durch die Schlag-Bewegung erwartet hätte B) der Ball ist durch Material viel leerer und springt anders von der Platte ab (Backspin-Ball springt sehr nach oben, Topspin-Ball springt sehr nach vorne -> leerer Ball springt weder noch und da man diesen fast nie übt trifft man nicht) -> da hilft nur gezielt den leeren Material Ball etwas früher treffen Gegen Material solltest du auch immer checken ob/wieviel Spinumkehr vorhanden ist (Lange Noppe, Anti, alles andere gibt eher leere Bälle). Dafür beim Einspielen am besten einen sehr spinnigen Topspin ins Material ziehen und den nächsten Schupfen und schauen ob starker Unterschnitt zurück kommt oder ob er eher leer ist. Wenn du das weißt dann weißt du auch wie du spielen musst, ob du wie im ersten Spiel (wo offenbar keine Spinumkehr vorhanden war) immer weiter nachziehen kannst oder ob du Ziehen/Schupfen abwechseln musst. Und was feste Topspins angeht gegen Unterschnitt oder im offenen Spiel, das solltest unbedingt üben ! Balleimer und/oder gute Ballmaschine und dann gib ihm, nicht diese langsamen-safen-70%-Beinarbeitsübungs-Topspins aus den Übungen, sondern richtig durchziehen mit guter Technik und voller Power (z.B. ersten auf Unterschnitt, danach 2-3 auf Überschnitt) und das am Fließband. Dann wirst du da deutlich schneller Fortschritte machen.

    • @jonathanrauhut3054
      @jonathanrauhut3054 27 днів тому

      beide Gegner sind etwas über 1400 TTR Punkte gewesen, die letzte Gegnerin ist bei 1100

  • @skakollaettklipp
    @skakollaettklipp 28 днів тому

    Third match, he takes everything with backhand and you place all your serves in his backhand. Here I would have suggested short FH serves so that he needs to step in. High chance those returns will be of rather low quality and you can have the advantage.

  • @DanielsTischtennisecke
    @DanielsTischtennisecke Місяць тому

    Why are you playing with a handicap (just one type of serve)? I know you mentioned in other videos you want to play a "system" but you rarely kill the 3rd ball. I dont see an advantage for you when the opponent can return literally every serve with ease. At least change the spin from time to time.

    • @BiscoWho
      @BiscoWho 27 днів тому

      Just as I tell him all the time. And you know what else? He serves way too long every time. I told him that he needs to use the use the short underspin serve a lot. And then, the other major issue is that he doesn't attack to where the daylight is. He goes right at where they're standing when he plays forehand attacks way too much. You gotta play forehand attacks to wherever they are not

  • @wilkinru
    @wilkinru Місяць тому

    You went to the forehand in the last game and got rewarded! Turn your hips and put them in the forehand corner vs these guys. Just count up the points when you turned your hips and went cross court with a strong forehand. Watch how that last guy returns serve. He isn't doing much, but his errors were fairly low. Keeps his paddle open on the backhand and just puts it back into play. This isnt a bad idea if you are having issues. I dont like his return motion, but he was putting the ball on the table.

  • @sebastianjo752
    @sebastianjo752 Місяць тому

    I think you have the same issue as me on some underspin balls you don´t judge or watch your opponent correctly. Sometimes they just lift the ball and if you loop it up like normal it goes out. Other then that in your situation, if you want to play harder, do multiball training and hit you top spins with 100%. It should make you feel more comfortable playing at 80% in matches.

  • @timoernst
    @timoernst Місяць тому

    First dude’s serves are mostly faulty (ball not tossed high enough 🫣)

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. Місяць тому

      @@timoernst yes that’s unfortunately pretty normal In my league

    • @sebastianjo752
      @sebastianjo752 Місяць тому

      it´s a shame so many people do wrong servers either on purpose or unknowingly. I think they never got corrected and just keep doing them. I played an opponent in my league and he just dropped the ball from his hand and blocked the view with his hand, didn´t even trow it up and when i asked if he could please do a correct serve he didn´t understand what he was doing wrong.

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. Місяць тому

      @@sebastianjo752 yeah I played somebody like that too and will probably play him again. Serves directly out of his hand on purpose and you don’t see to which corner at all. If you tell him he gets aggressive and flips out 🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @Blackain66
    @Blackain66 Місяць тому

    Nicht schlecht, schönes Spiel auch gerade am Ende Bitte mach aber unbedingt deinen Sound lauter, gerade wenn du dann leise kommentierst zwischendurch muss man extra die Anlage 3x so laut drehen wie bei allen anderen UA-cams. Was die Return-Fehler angeht, das ist ja bis zu einem gewissen Punkt normal. Dazu macht man ja verschiedene Angaben mit unterschiedlichem Spin, damit es eben nicht so leicht ist alles gut zu recieven. Den Anspruch das du da keine Fehler mehr machst kannste vergessen, das wird halt mit Erfahrung von alleine besser. Was mir auffällt ist das einige deiner Topspins schön feste sind zwischendurch, aber viele noch recht soft sind am Anfang und gerade die Eröffnungen sehr soft sind. Das Problem dabei ist nicht nur das du die Punkte die du eigentlich haben müsstest noch abnehmen lassen kannst wenn du nicht richtig durchziehst, sondern vor allem auch das deine Fehlerquote am Anziehen auf Unterschnitt/Angaben hochgeht wenn die Spannung steigt, also am Satzende und 5. Satz und deswegen siehst du gerade im 5. auch nicht so gut aus. Ich würde dir raten Unterschnitt wirklich relativ feste anzuziehen, dann machst damit mehr Punkte und auch alle lockereren Schläge die zu viel "Touch" benötigen wirst du unter Druck immer schlechter treffen.

  • @stormshadow1337
    @stormshadow1337 Місяць тому

    Voice too quiet

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. Місяць тому

      @@stormshadow1337 sorry I will correct it but for a few more episodes it will be a bit silent 😅, thought people want to hear the tt sounds louder.

  • @bjornmuller3225
    @bjornmuller3225 Місяць тому

    Wie bekommt du denn die Platte ins Sports inn, steht die da irgendwo 😅. Da ist normalerweise nur so nh alte

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. Місяць тому

      @@bjornmuller3225 Geheimplatte 😉. Nee, die ist Privat und darf eigentlich nicht von den Sports Inn Mitgliedern benutzt werden.

  • @paddle_smith
    @paddle_smith Місяць тому

    you're really encountering a lot of pimples

  • @tatsuyasatou4150
    @tatsuyasatou4150 Місяць тому

    do a video with him explaining his bh technique please

  • @tabletennisbuddy
    @tabletennisbuddy Місяць тому

    if a person NEVER ever played table tennis and wanted to learn this serve - How many hours of practice would it take? Even if you told such a person it is NOT the best serve for a noob. Please can you work out the estimate of the time necessary. Danke!

    • @radosawkapuscinski2808
      @radosawkapuscinski2808 Місяць тому

      It takes somewhere between a few and a few hundred hours. Hard to say, people learn with different pace.

  • @timoernst
    @timoernst Місяць тому

    Man … playing against these kind of guys sometimes makes me want to quit table tennis. Opponents barely moving with horrible form (standing straight upright with no bend in the legs etc.) or just relying on pips is just frustrating when you put in all the work and you know your technique is better and you’re moving properly. However, one thing I noticed in your game is that you smash a lot of flat balls into the net. I think you should focus on doing less of these easy mistakes. As you said, just get the ball on the table and maybe use more spin in your forehand instead of smashing to get the ball over the net. Good luck brother. I feel your pain 😬🏓

  • @danielrenaud4639
    @danielrenaud4639 Місяць тому

    Table tennis is so good and so frustrating 😮. Personally, I serve, from very short on one side of the table, to a long spinny serve on one side and on the other side. It breaks the momentum and brings some instability to the opponent. Be encouraged 💪

  • @TTDefender
    @TTDefender Місяць тому

    The toughest thing in tabletennis is, to get accustomed to different playing styles. You practice with high overall quality, but mostly against normal offensive inverted rubber partners. I saw some videos of you practicing against a long pips player, but most are very rhythmic practice sessions. Playing a tournament facing really awkward playing styles can be more than a handful to deal with. And as you rightfully mentioned, this can be rather frustrating. As a general idea, use less spin in your service game. Long empty serves are a great recipe. Empty ball on most long pips will give you an empty ball to attack. If you can’t open up with the third ball attack, be patient, just push empty balls on the LP and wait for the pop up push from your opponent. And if you attack - always go for the body or the wide forehand. Most LP players playing close to the table want to cover up a weak spot. They rarely have a strong attacking stroke. If they do, they play in a different league and are really tough customers. Try to find practice partners with LP no sponge to get used to the balls, they give you. As myself being a modern defender, LP OX or anti spin is a real pain. I‘m happy, that we do have a solid LP OX player in your club, so I can play him once in a while. It‘s never pretty, but really useful practice. 😂

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. Місяць тому

      @@TTDefender yeah, playing styles I am not used to make me play like 1100TTR points. It’s just crazy 🤪

    • @TTDefender
      @TTDefender Місяць тому

      @@limittless. If you ever want a defensive player as a partner for a training session, just let me know. I live in the southern part of Hessen, not too far away from Saarland, where you seem to play.

    • @Blackain66
      @Blackain66 Місяць тому

      ​ @TTDefender i know ur a good defender, but on these raitings there are also a lot of disruptive players and pushing empty easy balls into these long pips is also risky since quite a few of them gonna push to difficult wide angles / sideswipe and even nop-spin with their long pips making it incredible hard to have controlled longer rallies with them where they dont have the very big advantage of beeing very spin-unsensitive while giving very disuptive balls back i have faced as low as 1400 TTR players with faint long 2 LPs constantly nop-spinning very securely anything not too fast coming into his backhand making it incredible disruptive and tough to deal with if u dont have great natural feeling and touch as the attacking player, which u just cannot compare to playing a very predictable playing normal defender only pushing and chopping

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. Місяць тому

      @@Blackain66 100% thats what it feels like! I prefer good defenders that chop, because with them i at least know what is coming and what I do wrong or already well. But Empty, weird unpredictable spin, slow wide balls, that´s my kryptonite.

    • @TTDefender
      @TTDefender Місяць тому

      @@Blackain66 you are 100% correct. Playing awkward LP players is very different from playing a normal chopper. But once you embrace the No spin nuckle balls from a LP OX player, they will become pretty predictable as well. Once in a while, there will be a strange floaty ball. Learn to ignore those and just go for the next point. I used to be an offensive player and really enjoyed playing LP OX - especially since those really ugly no friction LPs aren’t allowed anymore and the plastic ball also helps the offensive players these days. But again - you need time to adapt and get used to it.

  • @user-th7zn6nv3j
    @user-th7zn6nv3j Місяць тому

    Wieviel ttr Punkte Hast du?

  • @triplebig
    @triplebig Місяць тому

    Playing real matches is super valuable, and Im sure now you have a lot to study with your coach I got frustrated out of my mind losing in similar ways before… just time and practice to recover

  • @sebastianjo752
    @sebastianjo752 Місяць тому

    i would have lost it against your second opponent. Pips are ok, but there should be a rule, that you can only play pips on side. other sheet has to be inverted rubber and no anti.

    • @limittless.
      @limittless. Місяць тому

      @@sebastianjo752 half long pips forehand long pips backhand, it is like playing against someone that doesn’t want to play table tennis but destroy it.

    • @sebastianjo752
      @sebastianjo752 Місяць тому

      @limittless. that's his goal for sure. Don't play just destroy others play.