I have been playing badminton for years and years and never heard the word "flow" to describe how you should move on the court. This video was illuminating, thanks
as a general principle it's well described and got a big smile when you talked about lin dan. it was one of the best descriptions of this aspect of his style of play i've ever heard and anyone's who watched lin dan a lot would find your description magically conjuring his play right before their eyes obviously you are talking about singles but let's note there is little if any application of this principle to doubles because everything happens much too fast in doubles for anyone to be concerned about moving too fast. in doubles play there are always two kinds of players: singles players trying to play doubles and players who let's say have given over to the doubles rhythm, and you'll notice a big difference between the type of footwork. in men's doubles, players need to move as fast as possible into defensive positions, follow the shuttle to the net lightning fast to apply pressure at the front while staying low and maintaining smooth continuous contact with the floor, and jump out in the back court to take advantage of every possible opportunity to attack. the strategy isnt about 4 corners like singles. instead it's all about above and below the tape and the footwork reflects that
great tips. I started playing single again. I was so tired covering full court and still late for a lot of return shots. This video shows up in time. I am an intermediate female player, and I have a BF Navy racquet for mostly playing double, love it!
My guess is he anticipated the straight shot and prepared to cover the backhand corner. You see diagonal split steps a lot in professional matches, it's all about where you THINK your opponent is hitting
Hi i love your videos, they have learned me a LOT. Im a 14 year old boy and have patellar tendonitis (knee injury) i have had it for 1 year but i still want to improve. Any tips? Could you maybe make a video on how to improve whilst injured?
Hey Simon! When injured, I’d look a lot into our technique videos as you can practice a lot of those without movement. Thanks for watching and hope you get through the injury asap ❤️
I have been playing badminton for years and years and never heard the word "flow" to describe how you should move on the court. This video was illuminating, thanks
Glad you liked it! If you haven’t, it would mean the world to us if you hit that subscribe button ☺️👊
Lee Hyun Il is another amazing player who "floats" on court. Great video. Hope you can share more tips or exercises to time our footwork better.
Absolutely right! He also had a beautiful footwork!
as a general principle it's well described and got a big smile when you talked about lin dan. it was one of the best descriptions of this aspect of his style of play i've ever heard and anyone's who watched lin dan a lot would find your description magically conjuring his play right before their eyes
obviously you are talking about singles but let's note there is little if any application of this principle to doubles because everything happens much too fast in doubles for anyone to be concerned about moving too fast. in doubles play there are always two kinds of players: singles players trying to play doubles and players who let's say have given over to the doubles rhythm, and you'll notice a big difference between the type of footwork. in men's doubles, players need to move as fast as possible into defensive positions, follow the shuttle to the net lightning fast to apply pressure at the front while staying low and maintaining smooth continuous contact with the floor, and jump out in the back court to take advantage of every possible opportunity to attack. the strategy isnt about 4 corners like singles. instead it's all about above and below the tape and the footwork reflects that
Lin Dan.. Amazing player🤩🔥
Wao .. many coaches don't have this idea . Eye opener for me. Many time i drain my energy just simply taking middle position
great tips. I started playing single again. I was so tired covering full court and still late for a lot of return shots. This video shows up in time. I am an intermediate female player, and I have a BF Navy racquet for mostly playing double, love it!
Really happy you like the videos as well as our racket. Thank you❤️☺️
04:23 after the shot you waited with your right foot forward, body facing left rather than coming to neutral... what's the idea behind that please?
My guess is he anticipated the straight shot and prepared to cover the backhand corner. You see diagonal split steps a lot in professional matches, it's all about where you THINK your opponent is hitting
Very nice video! Thanks for these wonderful tips.
You are welcome buddy ☺️
Hi i love your videos, they have learned me a LOT. Im a 14 year old boy and have patellar tendonitis (knee injury) i have had it for 1 year but i still want to improve. Any tips? Could you maybe make a video on how to improve whilst injured?
Hey Simon! When injured, I’d look a lot into our technique videos as you can practice a lot of those without movement.
Thanks for watching and hope you get through the injury asap ❤️
@@Basicfeather Thank you❤
Great Video, specially for Single Players. Here you'll see the difference between solid and an good player.
You definitely can’t master badminton without a good footwork! ☺️
Thanx, a lot to learn from you , sir👍...... i m new to this game 🙏
Welcome to badminton! Hope you love the game!
Subscribe to our channel to get weekly badminton content ☺️☺️
The best tip❤
@@chitung2277 yay! Thanks for watching and feel free to share with your badminton mates ❤️
👍👍👍👍👍