Friday 26 August 2022

3 Tips to Improve Your Doubles in Table Tennis

Would you enjoy playing doubles? The majority of ping pong players love a good doubles match now and then. Since there are two of you to share the glory and celebrate with, playing and winning in a doubles match can be just as fulfilling and enjoyable as playing in a singles match.

However, the majority of writings on table tennis balls tactics and techniques tend to concentrate on the singles side of the sport, with doubles play being considered as an afterthought. Let's take a closer look at the fundamentals of good doubles play since there are some significant distinctions between the strategies used for doubles play and singles play.

 


You Need Two

Experts believe that  a doubles team of weaker singles players compete against and defeat a pair of stronger singles players. The cause? A champion team will defeat a champion team, as the adage goes. Two inferior players who are familiar with one another's strengths and weaknesses can be a more difficult squad to defeat than two strong players who don't get along.

Some players are also regarded as outstanding doubles players simply because they are familiar with and employ many of the strategies listed below. Therefore, regardless of your partner, if you can comprehend and apply these suggestions, you should be well on your way to improving your doubles game.

 

Serving advice for doubles

In doubles, you must serve your opponent from your right hand half of the court to their right hand half of the court in a diagonal motion. By allowing most opponents to cover the entire half court with either their forehand or backhand side, this effectively eliminates the strategy of aiming at their playing elbow and decreases the amount of deception you may gain from placing the ball well.

Longer serves become less successful as a result, thus in doubles you should mostly use double bounce serves that bounce low over the net and are challenging to block. It's crucial to keep in mind that when serving, your partner must make the third stroke, not you. You should strive to use services that will help set up your partner's best attacks in order to increase the likelihood that they will make a successful third ball attack.

Serving short backspin serves that compel your opponents to push the ball back, for instance, doesn't make much sense if your partner isn't very adept at hitting backspin balls. Serving with short, low topspin/sidespin or float that your opponent can flick (but not with too much force) may increase the likelihood that your partner will launch an attack.

When serving, you can also employ a set of signals to let your partner know what serves you'll be using without letting your opponents know. To indicate the spin of the ball, point your finger in the direction it will travel from your opponent's racket in the first of two successive signs (i.e. down for backspin, up for topspin, a fist for float, and point in any direction that your sidespin will take the ball).

The length of the ball can then be determined using a second signal (i.e., pointing forward for a long serve, a fist for a normal double bounce serve, and pointing backwards for a very short serve).

Several factors can determine whether the signals are sent by the server or his companion. When one player is significantly stronger than the other, the stronger player will frequently make the calls and choose what to serve next based on his knowledge. Unless his partner has a specific plan in mind, in which case the partner will indicate his suggestions to the server, the server will often make the call if both players are quite equal in level.

 

Tips & Tricks for Doubles Return of Serve

Experts also believe that a victorious doubles team is often determined by the serve return. A competent receiver may often control the point by preventing his opponents from attacking and setting up his own partner's attempts because the degree of trickery is reduced while serving.

Receiving can be approached similarly to returning serves in singles, with the additional caveat that you should aim to steer play toward your partner's preferred style of game. Using largely crosscourt returns will tend to push the line of play from your opponents move crosscourt towards your partners if you are playing with a skilled forehand looper who can attack off topspin or backspin.

       Similarly, you should strive to use flicks and loop returns more frequently than pushing returns short if your partner is a powerful blocker.

       If your partner is a little clumsy, focus more of your returns in the centre of the table rather than frequently going to the wide angles, which will put more strain on his footwork.

 

Tips and Strategies for Doubles Rallies

Staying out of your partner's path while playing doubles is one of the most crucial aspects. In seasoned doubles teams, players learn to anticipate where their partner will be at any given moment, so you don't often see them cross paths.

When you pay attention to where your partner likes to play from, you will eventually develop the automatic ability to leave such places when he is hitting the ball. Okay, that's all for now. Now is the time to put these suggestions into action.

Wednesday 17 August 2022

Interesting Table Tennis Facts

 

Table tennis was introduced to the Seoul Summer Olympics in 1988 and has since become a mainstay of the four-year competition. Table tennis, one of the most thrilling sporting spectacles, is a game of intense speed and jaw-dropping perfection. The game was first known as ping pong before being renamed to table tennis in 1922. It was originally a pastime for the affluent in Victorian-era England. Europeans, particularly Hungarians, played and dominated the sport in its early years.

 

However, after making its way to the continent in the 1950s, table tennis gained enormous popularity in Asia, where it has since served as a breeding ground for some of the top players in the world. Table tennis debuted at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, just eight years after China hosted its first World Cup, and has since become a regular event at the Games. Let's learn some more interesting facts about this wonderful game.

 

Interesting facts about table tennis

 

      The table tennis court

 

According to the game's official rules, table tennis balls is played on a rectangular table made of fibre wood that is 2.74 × 1.53 metres and is divided into two halves. A net that divides the table into two parts is suspended from the table using two poles. The height of the table tennis net is 15.25 centimetres.

 

      Racquet for table tennis

 

The bat, also known as a "racquet" or "paddle," is often made of wood and measures around 17 cm long by 15 cm wide. It has rubber surfaces in the colours black and red on either side that aid players in adding and subtracting spin to the ball.

 

      ping pong ball

 

According to rules and regulations, the ball is normally orange or white, weighs around 2.7 grams, and has a 40 millimetre diameter.

 

      Health  and fitness

 

Table tennis is a game that you can play for the rest of your life if you play it recreationally and get some fitness. You can compete against people who are male or female, young or elderly, able-bodied or crippled. If two players in a table tennis competition are in the same rating group, an 80-year-old man may compete against an 8-year-old girl.

 

      Brain, body and mind

 

Playing table tennis has several advantages. On KQED, CBS, and other news networks, it has been referred to as the best cerebral sport. More areas of the brain are reportedly activated by table tennis than any other sport, according to study. To help senior patients fight mental illnesses like Alzheimer's and dementia, doctors have suggested playing table tennis. Table tennis has many advantages, including keeping the brain young. Exercise keeps the body young.

 

      The patent

 

The Parker Brothers first obtained a patent for "ping pong," another term for table tennis. However, Escalade Sports now owns it. Table tennis used to be played for 21 points until the revisions in 2000; presently, it only awards 11 points.

 

      China

 

The American table tennis group visited China in 1971, when China and the United States didn't have any diplomatic ties. The newspapers and media in general in the United States referred to that as "Ping Pong Diplomacy."

 

      Trademark

 

      The game was officially trademarked by a skilled businessman

 

James Devonshire, an Englishman, was the first to attempt to patent the indoor game, according to the International Table Tennis Federation. Although Devonshire, who applied for the invention in 1885, termed it "table tennis," documents show that he abandoned it by 1887. According to other accounts, the oldest surviving table tennis set was patented in 1890 by an Englishman by the name of David Foster.