Blogs

Larry Hodges' Blog and Tip of the Week will normally go up on Mondays by 2:00 PM USA Eastern time. Larry is a member of the U.S. Table Tennis Hall of Fame, a USATT Certified National Coach, a professional coach at the Maryland Table Tennis Center (USA), and author of ten books and over 2100 articles on table tennis, plus over 1900 blogs and over 600 tips. Here is his bio. (Larry was awarded the USATT Lifetime Achievement Award in July, 2018.)

Make sure to order your copy of Larry's best-selling book, Table Tennis Tactics for Thinkers!
Finally, a tactics book on this most tactical of sports!!!

Also out - Table Tennis TipsMore Table Tennis Tips, Still More Table Tennis Tips, and Yet Still More Table Tennis Tips, which cover, in logical progression, his Tips of the Week from 2011-2023, with 150 Tips in each!

Or, for a combination of Tales of our sport and Technique articles, try Table Tennis Tales & Techniques. If you are in the mood for inspirational fiction, The Spirit of Pong is also out - a fantasy story about an American who goes to China to learn the secrets of table tennis, trains with the spirits of past champions, and faces betrayal and great peril as he battles for glory but faces utter defeat. Read the First Two Chapters for free!

Tip of the Week

Recover from the Previous Shot.

MDTTC and USATT Activities

Lots of stuff going on right now. Here's a quick rundown.

We've finalized the teams and schedule for the new season of the Capital Area Team League. I'm on the organizing committee as webmaster, along with Commissioner Stafano Ratti, Treasurer John Olsen, and Publicist Richard Heo. Play begins this Saturday.

On Thursday and Sunday I ran the first meetings of the Fall junior programs I run at MDTTC. We have twelve new juniors, ranging in age from 5 to 13. We focused on grip, stance, ball-bouncing, and the forehand. Next up: the backhand and serving. On Sunday we also had a staff meeting to discuss upcoming plans for the programs.

On Sunday we had the first meeting of the new "Talent Development Program" at MDTTC, where ten of our best kids in the 7-9 age group met and trained, with five coaches – yes, a 2-1 ratio. We may have more depth in that age group than ever before. I don't think of this group has played tournaments – but that'll be happening soon. The program is sponsored by HW Global Foundation. Watch out China!

Also on Sunday was the weekly meeting of the MDTTC Adult Training Group. I also have two regular students on Sundays, but coincidentally both were away or unable to attend, so I had most of the morning and early afternoon off for a change.

I'm buried in USATT work. (I'm not alone on this – I'm working with other USATT people on many of these. CEO Gordon is helpfully involved in most issues.) A short rundown:

  • USATT Teleconference. We have one tonight at 7PM. The agenda includes various membership items, updates and discussion of the upcoming USA Nationals, a legal update on confidential issues, and plans for upcoming board meetings. (I have a 90-minute private coaching session on Mondays ending at 7PM, but I have to cut that short tonight. Student was understanding.)
  • Editing. Recently I've done a lot of detailed editing of various USATT things, from the USA Nationals entry form to various proposals. It's right up my alley – I'm pretty good at catching mistakes. I'm the type of reader who on page 246 will cry out, "That contradicts what you wrote on page 57!"
  • Net Visibility Rule – a proposal to fix the problem of players hiding their serve. I blogged about this a number of times, including July 17 and Sept. 18. I'll submit this soon.
  • Racket Testing Rule – a proposal to fix the problem with boosting. I blogged about it on Aug. 18. I'll submit this after the Net Visibility Rule proposal is dealt with – one at a time.
  • Regional Associations. I've created proto-type bylaws, and will be going public at some point this fall with plans to regionalize the country with regional associations. They'd be primarily responsible for table tennis in their region, including the next three bulleted items. (Many but not all of them would be state associations.)
  • State Championships. Here's is the list I've put together of current State Championships. (If you know of one not on this list, or would like to run one, email me.) The goal is for a state championship in all 50 states in 2016. I blogged about this on April 17. The goal is to turn these into regional news events that promote the sport. I also would like to initiate a "Parade of Champions" perhaps at the 2016 USA Nationals, where all the state champions are paraded out and recognized, perhaps just before the men's and women's finals.
  • Leagues – as chair of the USATT League Committee I'm taking a two-pronged approach – Team Leagues and USATT Rated Leagues. For the first, I'll be putting together a prototype of a regional team league, based on my experiences with the Capital Area Team League and others, such as the one in LA. For the latter, the plan is to allow clubs the option to run a USATT Rated Singles League, where it would be processed for rating, just like a USATT tournament. The earliest these might be ready are late fall or early 2016. (They require software development.)
  • Coaching Programs and Training Centers. I have plans here, and hope to work with the USATT Coaching Committee on this, though I might put this off until 2016. I'd like to see us start to recruit and train coaches who wish to become professional coaches – and teach them both the technical part (as done in the ITTF coaching program we've adopted) and the professional side (how to make a living as a coach, recruit students, set up and run training centers and coaching programs, etc.)
  • Professional Leagues. There are plans afoot on this, but another item for 2016.

Executing Table Tennis Shots

#4 in this new series by Brett Clarke just came out.

More Zhang Jike Multiball Training

Here's the video (1:55).

Topspin with a Bottle

Here's the video (2:03) that shows how to teach someone to topspin by spinning a ball off the top of a bottle.

Butterfly Badger Open

Argentina Open

Here's the home page for the event held this past weekend in Mendoza, ARG, with results, articles, pictures, and video.

Table Tennis is the Most Complete Sport for Kids

Here's the article. (Here's the non-Facebook version.)

New York Table Tennis League

Here's their September Newsletter.

Autographs of 60+ Table Tennis Greats – Barna, Bergmann, Vana, Leach

Here's the Ebay auction – it'll only cost you £12,000! (That's $18,637.02. Pocket change.) Alas, the auction just ended.

Net-Net Post-Net

Here's the video (11 sec) of this most basic shot.

Some Lobbing, a Backhand Countersmash, and a Little Celebration

Here's the video (40 sec).

Two-Ball, Bottle-Net, Blue Picnic Pong

Here's the video (35 sec) of how the game should be played.

What is the Optimal Number of Ping Paddles?

Einstein has your answer. Equipment junkies, go to it! (I created this one.) 

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Texas State Closed.  November 14th at Texas Wesleyan.  Not sure if it will become an annual event.

Mark

If You Want to Compete, You Have to Cheat

This headline isn't technically accurate - there are a few top players who serve legally, and are still able to compete. Vladimir Samsonov is perhaps the best example. But the gist of the statement is correct - at the higher levels, since players are allowed to illegally hide their serves, players who do not cheat are at a substantial disadvantage. (The other major cheating problem in table tennis is boosting, which I discuss and give my solution to in this blog, which I will submit later as a rules proposal.)

I've been torn about whether to post pictures of all the USA cadets hiding their serves to show the extent of the problem. They're only kids. But the videos are public, and so anyone who isn't blind can see them. And I don't really blame the cadets who hide their serve in response to an opponent who does so and gets away with it - they are doing what they need to do to compete, and what they are coached to do, because the rules aren't being enforced or fixed. (I often look to see who does it first in a match– that's the one I do blame. You definitely shouldn't be hiding your serve unless the opponent does so far and gets away with it.)

How bad is the problem? At the 2014 U.S. Open there was only one top cadet regularly hiding his serve. He made it to the final of Under 14 Boys, where he met up with a strict umpire. After getting warned on the second serve of the match (and I think faulted later on), he served legally and lost. 

But since that time, in tournament after tournament, umpires did not enforce the rule, despite regular complaints from opponents. The result? It became obvious that illegal hidden serves were allowed, and that those who used them had a large advantage. And so, one by one, the other top cadets began to illegally hide their serves. 

And the result? At the 2015 North American Championships (Sept. 5-7), there are online videos of seven of the eight quarterfinalists in Cadet Boys' Singles, and all eight Men's Singles quarterfinalists. Every single one of them illegally hid their serves. Not one of them was faulted for this. (Very rarely, one would be faulted for something else, such as hand over the table or throwing the ball back too much.) Here's the North American Video Page. (If you spend time watching the serves, make sure to freeze during the serve as the ball goes behind the head. The best way to do this is to freeze the screen just before the ball reaches the head, and then use the space bar to rapidly start/stop the video.)

We've taught our top cadets that if you want to compete, you have to cheat.

I'm all about finding solutions. It's become obvious that few umpires will enforce the serving rule as it is written, in particular the part that says that if an umpire isn't satisfied a serve is legal, he must either warn (the first time) or fault. The problem is that players are able to serve so umpires aren't sure if the serve is hidden or not, and so they let it go. And so the cheaters are honored and we cheat the honorable ones. 

I blogged about how to solve this a number of time, such as here. I have a proposal that addresses this, with the rule change explained in that blog. The actual rule change, which I call the "Net Visibility Rule," would be as follows:

Current Rule:
02.06.04: From the start of service until it is struck, the ball shall be above the level of the playing surface and behind the server's end line, and it shall not be hidden from the receiver by the server or his or her doubles partner or by anything they wear or carry.  

Proposed Rule (additions bracketed in bold):
02.06.04: From the start of service until it is struck, the ball shall be above the level of the playing surface and behind the server's end line, and it shall not be hidden from the receiver[, or any part of the net assembly and its upward extension,] by the server or his or her doubles partner or by anything they wear or carry. 

Here's a good example of the serve that nearly everyone is now using and getting away with. As you can see, the ball is clearly hidden from the receiver, as will the contact a split second later. From the umpires' perspective from the side, they're not sure if it's hidden from the receiver or not, and so they do not call it. (They should, of course, since if the umpire isn't sure about the legality of a service he is supposed to warn or fault.) However, even from the umpires' perspective, it's obvious the ball is hidden from the right-hand net post, and so he'd likely call it. (In the proposal, I have pictures from the umpire's perspective that show this, from both sides.)

The proposal is eight pages long, with a number of photos showing how players hide their serve, and how and why they would be called illegal under the proposal. It includes pictures of both USA players and international ones hiding their serve, including Men's World Champion Ma Long. The pictures are from both the receiver's and umpire's point of view.

There's also a seven-page addendum which is a gallery showing all of the players hiding their serves at the North American Championships – all eight Men's Singles quarterfinalists and seven of the eight Cadet Boys' Singles quarterfinalists (one of them wasn't videoed).

There isn't any perfect way to fix the serving rule, but I believe this comes pretty close. Here's what I wrote in the proposal near the end:

There is often no perfect rule, and it's quite possible that in some cases, umpires would fail to call a hidden serve under the proposal. But that's also true of other rules, such as the six-inch toss rule, as mentioned earlier. But let's emphasize this: while an umpire might not always call a five-inch toss serve, he would almost always call a serve where the ball is thrown out of the hand, as that would obviously not be a six-inch toss. Similarly, under this proposal, while an umpire might not always call a serve that's hidden from part of the net or net posts, he would almost always call ones that are hidden from the receiver, as they would obviously be hidden from the net posts. And even if umpires don't call all of them, servers aren't going to hide their serve if they are frequently getting faulted.  

I'll submit the proposal soon. I'll also likely put it online at some point – but I'm still hesitant about the reaction of posting all those photos of our top cadets hiding their serves, i.e. cheating. Since half the Men's Singles Quarterfinalists were cadets (!), posting those has the same problem. (I also don't want to post it until after it's been finalized and submitted.)

But there's a reason I'm featuring pictures of so many of our top cadets hiding their serves in the proposal – it gives quite an impact when we show what our lack of enforcing or fixing the serving rule has led to – teaching our kids that if they want to compete, they have to cheat!

Busy Friday

Meanwhile, when I wasn't collaborating with several people on the Net Visibility Rule Proposal (above), I was:

  • One hour teaching the first session of a new junior class (six new kids), and saying 30 minutes late hitting with some of them. Crisis of the day – the robot broke down halfway through the class, causing problems since it was one of the three stations in the class rotation. Normally I'd resolve this by turning it into a serving station, but one problem – it was day one for these kids, and they didn't yet know how to serve. So I changed the class plans and taught them serves so they could practice them.
  • One hour private coaching (slow day).
  • Editing/proofing the draft of the USA Nationals entry form.
  • Going over outlines for several upcoming USATT ventures, mostly involving regional leagues and associations.
  • Tutoring one of our kids for 90 minutes on writing. He's eight, so we're working on punctuation, grammar, and above all, handwriting. It's my third session with him. I also have him spend 30 minutes of each session writing a new story, where we work on these things. Most of his stories involve me getting hit by meteors or exploding stars, or being forced to eat variations of fish ice cream.
  • Dealing with (and finally resolving) various problems with my new smart phone.
  • Answering 463,246 emails. I conscientiously spent at least five minutes on each. You do the math.

Beltway Plaza Table Tennis Challenge

Here's the article on the exhibition and competition to be held tomorrow (Saturday, Sept. 19), from 1-4PM, at Beltway Plaza in Maryland with Navin Kumar. Navin is one of my students, but alas, I have to miss it due to coaching commitments.

Executing Table Tennis Shots

#3 in this new series by Brett Clarke just came out.

Practicing the Short Push

Here's the video (26 sec), which makes use of a mini-hula hoop.

The Aces in Table Tennis

Here's a video (2:09) that shows players serving down-the-line aces. It's in French, but you can learn by watching, plus it's fun to see! Here's my Tip of the Week from 2011, "How to Ace an Opponent." If I were to grade and rank every single technique I did during my playing prime, my down-the-line ace serve was likely the single best thing I did. It's rusty these days, but I can usually bring it back after ten minutes practice.

Dimitrij Ovtcharov Multiball

Here's 17 seconds of intense multiball training with the German star.

Looking for Some Good Table Tennis Videos?

Here's the ITTF Channel, with lots of links to big matches from the recent Austrian and Belgium Opens. (Am I the only one to notice from the ITTF schedule that they have, consecutively, from Aug. 5 to Sept. 27, the China, Bulgarian, Czech, Austrian, Belgium, Argentina, and Chile Opens? They certainly are sticking to their ABCs!

USATT Insider

Here's the new issue, which came out Wednesday. You can have this emailed to you every Wednesday morning by going here.  Or you can wait for the online version, which I generally link to every Friday.

Hard Work Pays Off

Here's the podcast (27:34) with Adam Gittings, from Expert Table Tennis. "Adam Gittings is 18 years old, lives in Doncaster, and has Asperger syndrome, dyspraxia, and type 1 diabetes. Three years ago he was invited to a South Yorkshire disabled sports trial day at the English Institute of Sport in Sheffield, where he was given to opportunity to try out a load of different sports and see if he had the potential to join any of the regional squads. Little did he know at the time, but that day would change his life forever."

International Table Tennis

Here's my periodic note (usually every Friday) that you can great international coverage at TableTennista (which especially covers the elite players well) and at the ITTF home page (which does great regional coverage). Butterfly also has a great news page.

More Mike Mezyan Pictures

NOTE - If you are unable to see these pictures, all you have to do is join the Table Tennis Group - it's easy! Here are all the past, present, and (soon) future pictures he's collected. (I pick out his best ones for here - he has more.)

Table Tennis Fight Club

There really is a Table Tennis Fight Club in London – and when you go there, it automatically plays the Table Tennis Fight Club video (28 sec)! (Here's the youtube version.) Make sure to check out their Rules section! There's also the Table Tennis Fight Club Open Arena (also in London), which automatically plays another great video when you go there. (It's scenes from the movie "Balls of Fury.")

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regarding cheating:  it's not whether the rules are accurate or not - it's whether they are easily enforceable or not.  Umpires are bored to death, and aren't compensated for much, so they just want the match to be over with asap really.  No incentive for them to enforce the rules if the opponent isn't complaining.  And even if complaints are there, there's no easy way to enforce anyway.  So umpires are afraid they are holding up a beautiful match so they just let it go.

As i mentioned before, the only way to enforce rules are by machines.  No arguments.  We got replays too.  No arguments.

God help us if that day ever comes.   Tennis already uses computer to resolve arguments.  

 

A Burned Finger, Arm Problems, a Cold, and a Deviated Septum, Oh My!

Let's take these in order. (Oh, and remember junior star Jessica Shen from the 1990s? We'll get to her.) 

On Monday, I over-microwaved spaghetti for lunch. When I took it out a gob of boiling sauce hit the back of my right index finger. The skin blistered - it was pretty bad. I ran cold water over it for a while, cleaned it, put antiseptic on it, and bandaged it. It's been hurting like crazy ever since. Worse, when I'm hitting backhands with my students the back of the index finger faces the student - and about once every 15 minutes someone smacks it with a ball. OW!!! I may have to put some padding on it for tomorrow. 

On Wednesday, while hitting some hard backhands with a student, my arm started hurting a bit. I've blogged about this a few times; I wear an arm brace that really helps. But while the brace mostly protects it, I have to be careful not to make it worse. Note to self: no more very hard backhands for a few days. 

On Tuesday (yes, I'm going out of order), I woke up with a slight cold. I was blowing my nose and could barely breathe except through my mouth. It was pretty tiring. It's only a minor cold, but it would be nice if it decides to go somewhere else. Maybe to this guy

However, the bigger problem is the return of the deviated septum. It's been a very gradual process, but the cold brought its effects to the forefront - and are the primary reason I can barely breathe except through the mouth, which is tiring. It also means I've been mostly tired the last few days - it's hard to be energetic when struggling to breathe. I had surgery for this in 2007, and spent a week in bed as it healed - no coaching or much of anything else. (World #1 tennis player Novak Djokovic also had this surgery.) I also learned that it's one of those things that sometimes comes back after ten years or so, and that someday I might need to do it again. Alas, someday is coming, and it's probably just a matter of time before I have to go through with it again. I may have to pick out a week later this fall for this. I've been wearing sinus cones at night, which helps, but they'd look funny if I wear them in table tennis.

Here's an interesting table tennis connection here - remember Jessica Shen, who (along with MDTTC practice partner Vivian Lee) dominated junior girls in the U.S. during much of the 1990s? She's now Dr. Jessica Shen (page down for her picture and profile), an ENT specialist (Ears, Nose, Throat - the technical term is "Otorhinolaryngology") - and her practice is about a mile from my house! I may be contacting her soon. 

Whether you are a coach, player, or anything else, you better take care of your health! (Says the person who sees a doctor about once a decade, and only under extreme duress.)

Fixing the Grip

I blogged recently about how we made a change in one of my student's grip. He'd gradually switched to an extreme backhand grip for backhands, and an extreme forehand grip for forehands, leading to all sorts of problems. Since then he's been using an extremely neutral grip. In drills it's paying off, and he's starting to feel comfortable on the forehand side. However, he's still having problems controlling the backhand. The solution? We're going to stick with the neutral grip until at least the end of the month. The way to fix a bad habit is often to exaggerate the opposite, and do some saturation training – see first two items in my Tip of the Week Changing Bad Technique. After Oct. 1, I may let him go to a slight backhand grip for backhands, like Waldner did.

How Table Tennis Turned Into an Olympic Dream

Here's the story and video (2:38) of two kids from South Bend, Indiana, coached by Dan Seemiller. "Two young boys from South Bend’s west side are teaching us how important life experiences are. Dion and Dionta Payne-Miller are living out dreams they probably never thought possible before all through the sport of table tennis."

Vladimir Samsonov vs Yuya Oshima in the Champions League 

Here's the highlights video (8:08).

Ma Long – King of Epic Shots

Here's the highlights video (5:18) of the world men's champion, set to music.

Double-Bouncing Loop

Here's the video (3 sec) – you don't see this very often! Watch closely or you'll miss that the guy on the far side's loop bounces twice.

Adam Bobrow in Taiwan

Long Distance Target Practice

Here's the video (12 sec) as Kevin Korb smacks a ball from way back.

Table Tennis Rocks!

Here's the picture. (Here's the non-Facebook version.)

Super Heroes vs. Chinese Table Tennis Players

Here's the picture! Liu Guoliang vs. Nick Fury; Zhang Jike vs. Iron Man; Ma Long vs. Captain America; Ding Ning vs. Black Widow; Fan Zhendong vs. The Hulk; Wang Hao vs. Thor; and Xu Xin vs. Hawk Eye!

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Type of Table Tennis Forum Members

Here's a hilarious new video (12:27) that talks about the various types of people you find on a table tennis forum. It's spookily accurate!!!

I used to be very active in online forums, but in recent years not so much. Why? It was a combination of dealing with what the video calls "1500 Experts" and trolls. Often someone would post a coaching question, and I'd answer it, only to be contradicted and even scorned by these "Experts." Let's just say that there are some very opinionated people out there who haven't actually done anything in table tennis, and frankly speaking, don't know what they are talking about. This doesn't mean there aren't lower-rated players who are knowledgeable about table tennis, but they are outnumbered and often outposted by those who are not but believe otherwise.

One that comes to mind was a guy who argued strenuously with me about forehand looping technique. He'd argue to the ends of the earth that you only use your arm for the shot, no legs or hip rotation, and talked about his revolutionary methods that gave him a more powerful loop than those taught by the clueless people who taught table tennis. He admitted he'd never been to a table tennis club or tournament, nor had he played any top players, but he knew. He KNEW.

I've also had to deal with way too many trolls. I made the mistake (please slap me) of trying to have reasonable discussions with a few of them, and let's just say that never worked. I learned.

Easily the most infamous troll out there is known by many from online forums. I'm not going to name him, but many in online community know who I'm talking about. He's been trolling newsgroups and forums since the 1990s, and (as mentioned in the video above) likes to call others "Robo-Nazis." He regularly gets banned, but then comes back under another name – but using the very same language as before, making him instantly identifiable.

He likes to make up stuff about me. For example, he constantly refers to the "Hodges-Scholer Aspect Ratio Rule of 1998," and then goes on diatribes about it and me. This was a rule or regulation whereby the ratio of the height of a pips-out rubber to its width could not exceed a certain amount, which restricted long pips. I not only had nothing to do with this rule, I didn't even know about it until this troll started blaming me for it! It so happens that 1998 was the year I mostly took off from table tennis, and it was when I came back in 1999 I found out about it. And yet there are literally hundreds of postings about this with my name on it. I'm sure there are hundreds of people who think I was involved. I don't even have an opinion on the rule, despite his many postings to the contrary. (The only rule affecting long pips players that I was involved in was the two-color rule – that I was for, and was one of the people arguing for it when it finally became a rule way back in 1983. I don't even have an opinion on frictionless pips other than that if it's a rule or regulation, it should be enforced; if it can't be enforced, it shouldn't be a rule or regulation.)

There are different types of trolls. One troll who isn't so active anymore would go on and on about how great he was, and lecture everyone on every aspect of table tennis. He had incredibly strong opinions on everything, and an extremely inflated view of his own playing level, even challenging me to a $1000 match. And so, when the USA Team Trials happened to be in his city, I showed up at his club, accepting his challenge. He refused to play for money, but we did play two matches. I still have the scores – I won at 5,3,3,0 (yes, 11-0) and 3,6,4,1. He was about 1500.

Another troll I argued with a few times (no longer active) insisted there is only one type of equipment everyone should use, and one way to do every stroke, etc. He was an outspoken hardliner on all of this, and really dismissive of opposing views. I also met him at a club one time and played him – he was about 1900.

There's another troll out there who doesn't infect forums much anymore – he did so on one for a time but was banned, and never came back. However, his mode of operations now is to send out mass emails. When I ran for the Board last December he would send out dozens of mass emails on a daily basis. However, you only had to read one or two sentences before you realized the guy was crazy or a troll. He claims I wrote a feature article attacking him in a major newspaper, that I get paid hundreds of thousands of dollars by the "sponge conglomerates" (I wish!!!) to keep hardbat and sandpaper down (!), and other stuff.

I also tired a bit of all the infatuation with equipment, i.e. equipment junkies. Getting good equipment is important, but it's a distant back seat to good technique. And yet I've been in at least a couple discussions with players who argue the reverse, that equipment is more important than technique, or at least on a par.

Event Listing for the 2015 USA Nationals

Here it is – over 90 events! They will be held Dec. 14-19 at the Las Vegas Convention Center. The final event listing, with dates and times, will be released Sept. 23.

Beat the Lobber!

Here's the new article by Samson Dubina.

Stop Pushing!

Here's the coaching article from Ben Larcombe.

Ping-Pong Will Help Your Brain

Here's the article.

Top Talent to Compete at 2015 Butterfly Badger Open

Here's the article by Barbara Wei on the tournament to be held in Franklin, Wisconsin (15 miles from Milwaukee), on Sept. 18-20.

Street Pong the Next Big Thing?

Here's the article with pictures.

Steel Beams Salvaged from 110-Year-Old Railroad Transformed into Sturdy Ping Pong Table

Here's the article with pictures.

UTM Receives a Smash Hit for Ping Pong

Here's the article on table tennis at the University of Toronto.

Colorado Team League Started September 14

Here's the article about the team competition, organized by the Denver Table Tennis Alliance.

Once Again Chinese Community Center of Flushing Proves Popular Home

Here's the ITTF article on an ITTF Coaching Course held in the U.S., run by Sidney Christophe.

Interview with Hou Yingchao at the 2015 LA Open

Here's the video interview (2:36) by Barbara Wei with #2 seed, who would go on to win Open Singles over Joo Se Hyuk.

Great Champions of Table Tennis

Here's the music video (4:08).

Trick Shots with Kevin Korb

Here's the new video (15 sec).

The Spectacled Avenger?

Here's the picture – it looks like some sort of Super Woman playing table tennis1

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Tip of the Week

Do You Have the Blocking Reachies?

My Weekend

Here's a short rundown of my weekend, Fri-Tue morning.

  • Friday: This is usually my slowest day, where I normally only do the afterschool program, which includes picking up kids, coaching for 30-60 minutes, and tutoring. I'm tutoring one eight-year-old in English after our table tennis sessions. On Friday we focused on capitalization as he has a bit of trouble with that. Then, since he needed writing practice, I had him write a one-page story. The story was "How Larry Died" . . . and I had many glorious deaths (suffocated on Mars, hit on the head by a meteor, star exploded around me, and I was forced to eat 50,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 planets full of fish crab cooked dark green vegetable mushroom pumpkin pie ice cream. (That's how many zeroes he used, and as you can see, he knows what foods I don't like. I love ice cream, but not this flavor!) Alas, he still forgets to capitalize a lot of things, including my name, which was "larry" over and over.
  • Saturday: I was scheduled to coach only 1.5 hours that day, but I'd coached every day for about three weeks, and so I got a substitute and mostly took the day off, where I mostly read. That night at 8PM we had an organizational meeting of the Capital Area Team League, where I met with Stefano Ratti, John Olsen, and Richard Heo and worked out the fall schedule and other issues. More on this later when it's all finalized. (We currently have 12 teams with 59 players, but may have one or two last minutes teams added.)
  • Sunday: I did 2.5 hours of private coaching with Sameer and Navin, and the 1.5 hours adult training. (The 1.5 hour junior class I normally run on Sundays is on break, starting up again next Sunday.) Sameer is going through a grip change, and so while his strokes are now smoother and more powerful, he doesn't have as much control yet in games – but that will come. (I blogged about this last Thursday.) Navin continues to work on his forehand, and in particular his transition from backhand to forehand. We also did a lot of work on serve and receive. He recently went from short pips on the forehand to inverted, and he has a bit more punch on his forehand now. Since he now has an inverted side to go with the long pips on his backhand, I'm working with him on developing spinny serves. As to receive, the focus is on low returns at wide angles. I spent most of the morning and then late into the night working various USATT issues, in particular league and regional association plans, and didn't get to bed until 4:15AM. 
  • Monday: I did 2.5 hours of private coaching with Daniel (recently back from a summer in NYC and Germany) and Sameer. Daniel's a bit out of practice, but I was happy to see that the work we did in the Spring on his forehand loop had taken hold – his strokes are good though a bit rusty. He used to swing with too much arm, and so we spent much of a month really working on that, including lots and lots of shadow practice. (I blogged about it while we were doing it.) Alas, I was feeling a bit sick that night, and went to bed early, around 10:30PM.
  • Tuesday morning: I woke up with what I think is a minor cold. It was already 8:30 AM – I'd slept for ten hours straight!!! That's unheard of for me, except when I'm sick – I normally sleep about six hours/night. I almost didn't do the blog this morning because of this as I was exhausted, but then I realized the earth might fall into the giant orange ping-pong ball in the sky if I didn't.

Serving More Deceptively

Here's the new coaching article by Han Xiao, with links to video.

Mental Pitfalls: Switch to Winning in Your Mind

Here's the coaching article by Frank Völler.

The First Three Strokes

Here's the video (27:39) of former superstar player Zhang Yining at a seminar. (She speaks through a translator.) She was the 2004 and 2008 Olympic Gold Medalists for Women's Singles, 2005 and 2009 World Women's Singles Champion, and 4-time Women's World Cup Champion.

Laj Forehand Counterspin Analysis

Here's the video (2:22) where Coach Brett Clarke analyzes this player's forehand counterloop.

The Mysterious Table Tennis Coach

Here's the new article from Coach Jon.

USATT Board of Directors Action Items for August 21-22, 2015 Meeting in Chicago

Here's the page. A more detailed version with minutes will go up later. I made several motions in the meeting – feel free to ask about any of them.

Top 8 Health Benefits of Playing Ping Pong

Here's the chart. (Here's the non-Facebook version.) I linked to another, more detailed one last week – Health Benefits of Table Tennis Infographic.

"I am standing where the ball comes…"

Here's a great quote from the legendary Jan-Ove Waldner. (Here's the non-Facebook version.)

11 Questions with Cory Eider

Here's the USATT interview with the 2013 USA Nationals Men's Singles Finalist.

2015 Newgy Ohio Open

Here's the article (with links to video) by Samson Dubina.

Ma Long Training

Here's the new video (1:22).

Japan Table Tennis – The Young Kids are Incredible

Here's the video (65 sec).

One of the Greatest Rallies Ever

Here's the video (64 sec, including replay) of what say is the best rally ever. That's Xu Xin (near side) and Zhu Linfeng, both lefties, in this crazy 35 seconds of counterlooping at the Chinese Super League.

Top Ten Shots from the Austrian Open

Here's the ITTF video (5:28).

Backhand Around-the-Net Counterlooping Practice

Here's video (28 sec) of this fundamental shot that everyone should have.

Chinese Cherries? Nathan Hsu in China

Episode 5 of Nathan Hsu's trip to China is now up. All five episodes are below.

RGIII to the Olympics?

Now that Washington Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III is out of his starting quarterback position, perhaps this would be a good time for him to make good on his dream of making it to the Olympics, perhaps in ping-pong? Here's the video (74 sec) from two years ago of him making this statement, with the response from the MDTTC juniors!!! (Nathan Hsu created this video back then, with Tong Tong Gong, Derek Nie, Roy Ke, and Crystal Wang.) 

Ma Long and Liu Guoliang Around the Table

Here's the video (21 sec) as they put on an impromptu exhibition.

More Mike Mezyan Pictures

NOTE - If you are unable to see these pictures, all you have to do is join the Table Tennis Group - it's easy! Here are all the past, present, and (soon) future pictures he's collected. (I pick out his best ones for here - he has more.)

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Today is Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. I'm not Jewish, but the local schools celebrate it and are closed today. If the kids I coach get the day off, so do I! So no blog today, and the Tip of the Week will go up tomorrow, as I sleep late. But not too late – I've got a long todo list today involving various USATT, MDTTC, and CATTL issues, plus some private coaching tonight. (You may notice I'm putting this up at about 4:15 AM Monday morning. Guess what I've been doing all night?) But to tide you over, here's an…

...Incredible Doubles Rally at the Belgium Open

Here's the video (38 sec) between the Koreans and Hungarians in the semifinals at the Belgium Open held last weekend. Hungary won the match! (They'd lose the final. See Men's Doubles results.) 

Some Ping-Pong Reading?

Why not spend some of your weekend (or next weekend) reading some table tennis books? Or are you one of the 28% who haven't read a book in the last year? No, table tennis players are too smart, and of course are voracious readers. Here's my table tennis book collection – currently at 234 books and 13 feet of shelf space. You could, of course, just read my books - here they are. (Here's my Amazon page.) Or you could browse these, mostly from the last ten years.

Table Tennis Instructional Books

Table Tennis History Books

Table Tennis Novels

Other Table Tennis Books

Zhang Jike Backhand Loop Multiball Training

Here's the video (53 sec).

USATT Insider

Here's the new issue, which came out Wednesday.

Nations Top Players to Compete at Sports Complex

Here's the article by Jeff Bandry on the Butterfly Badger Open coming up Sept. 18-20 in Milwaukee.

Interview with Joo Se Hyuk

Here's the video (1:50) of the interview with South Korean defensive star at the recent LA Open, by Barbara Wei.

Tin-Tin Ho: 12 Years a Table Tennis Player

Here's the new podcast (40:30) with the 17-year-old English star, by Expert Table Tennis.

International Table Tennis

Here's my periodic note (usually every Friday) that you can great international coverage at TableTennista (which especially covers the elite players well) and at the ITTF home page (which does great regional coverage). Butterfly also has a great news page.

Table Top Loop Practice?

Here's the "Easy Swing" device, perhaps overpriced at $43.84. It's for practicing spinning the ball. I have a different version of this, and I'm on my third one – they break rather easily if you mishit. So . . . don't mishit.

Austrian Open Men's Final Highlights

Here's the video (5:40, with time between points removed) of the final between Jun Mizutani and Dimitrij Ovtcharov.

Around-the-Net Counterloop and Backhand Sidespin Counterloop

Here's the video of these two consecutive shots (30 sec, including slow motion replay).

The Four-Table Serve

Here's the video (8 sec). I've done three; looks like I'm going to have to up my game!

The Fashionable Soo Yeon Lee

Here's the article, here's the pictures, and there's the video (1:48). (This is from 2011 – I may have linked to some of this long ago.)

Ping-Pong Match: The Slammer

Here's the funny commercial (31 sec) for Grubhub Restaurant. So . . . how many of you naively believe it's real, and the ball wasn't put in by computer?

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Good Morning

In your date/time line, time is UTC (formerly GMT) and in your blog text, time is EDT?  Then again, sometimes my tablet gives your date/time line in HST :)

Fixing the Grip

Here's an interesting coaching story. I've been coaching one junior for about three years. Over the last year he's grown about six inches and his hands grew even more –at age 14, they're as big as mine. During his first three years his biggest technical problem was a tendency to stand up too straight, which affected his strokes. In particular, it led to a tendency to stroke too much upward. Often his strokes would start forward and then go upwards as he contacted the ball, which is the natural tendency of players who stand up too straight.

Over the past year, as he's grown, he's run into another problem - he began to forehand loop with mostly his upper body, with less and less legs and hip rotation. I kept harping on this, but he had difficulty doing so. At the same time, he seemed to overcome his problem with standing up too straight, adopting a very wide stance that kept him relatively low. So we'd sort of swapped one problem for another. 

And then, a few weeks ago, he sort of "confessed" something to me - that he'd been changing his grips much more than I'd thought. Yes, grips.  

I'd known that, like Waldner and many others, he had what I thought was a minor grip change from forehand to backhand, where he'd put pressure with the thumb on backhands, which rotated the racket slightly into the backhand position. However, over the last year - probably because his hands were getting bigger - he'd begun using more and more extreme grip changes, to the point where he was now using a relatively extreme backhand grip for backhands, and a relatively extreme forehand grip for forehands. And he was running into all sorts of problems in rallies as he tried (often unsuccessfully) to switch back and forth. The subject had actually come up about six months ago, but at that time it was only a minor forehand and minor backhand grip, and he wasn't having quite as much trouble switching yet.

And now my guilty admission - it happened so gradually that I never noticed the grip changes until he showed them to me a few weeks ago. But once I saw how much he was switching his grip, I saw that that was the root of the problem he'd had over the past year with using his legs and hip rotation on forehand loops. 

Some top players do use forehand or backhand grips, but they do so only after they've developed their strokes. You want to use a neutral grip when developing the foundation, with the racket aimed in the same direction as the natural stroke. In this case, the student's extreme grips were affecting his strokes. The extreme forehand grip, combined with wider stance, led him to a stroke where he basically rotated his upper body only, while driving his racket mostly forward and away from the body, rather than rotating more in a circle. For a long time I thought this was because of bad habits from his previously standing up too straight. 

So for the past few days (three sessions – he's recently greatly increased his weekly sessions) all we've done are basic strokes where he has to use a completely neutral grip. He's not completely comfortable with it yet, but the result in multiball drills is obvious - his shots are much more fluid and powerful, and without any of the bad habits from before. From a technical point of view, his technique is now very good. He just isn't used to it. So we're going to spend at least a month where he doesn't play any matches, not even practice ones, except for a few closely supervised ones with me. I expect that by October he'll be completely comfortable with the neutral grip and his much better technique. 

After all, a Neutral Grip will lead to such awesome play that it'll induce an Elating Purr from users. And since I expect that he's reading this, just letting him know that if he says "Elating Purr" (which, of course, is an anagram for "Neutral Grip") at the start of our session today, we'll play more practice points in today's session so he can get more used to the new grip in game situations. That'll make him very happy induce an Elating Purr!

Traveling with the North Koreans

Here's the article from Matt Hetherington.

USATT Rules Committee Minutes – July 2015

Here's the link.

Why Table Tennis is a Surprisingly Great Study Aid

Here's the article – and with the kids just going back to school, maybe now's the time they take up the sport?

Aiming for a Moving Target

Here's the video (51 sec).

USATT Hall of Fame Inductees Slide Show

Here it is – watch as the pictures at the top go through the slideshow of all the new inductees.

ITTF Present Table Tennis Fire

Here's the video (4 min).

Just a Great Rally

Here's the video (10 sec).

More Trick Shots

Here's the video (16 sec).

CJ Anderson of the Denver Broncos Plays Table Tennis

Here's the video (3:02) where he does an entire interview while rallying. He's using a hardbat with basement strokes.

Krazy Table Tennis Set from 1920s

Here's the picture – and here's where you can buy it on Ebay. (Update – it sold before I posted this – for £49.99, which is $76.74.)

Rules Changes in Table Tennis

Here's the hilarious video (9:48) – with apologies to Adham Sharara!

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what is it that makes players who stand up straight swing more 'up' instead of forward? Trying to visualize what would cause this...

In reply to by despreston

It's easier to show than to write about. It's also more against backspin than topspin. When a player stands up too straight, his racket is held higher in the backswing, and so there's less lift when he strokes. He also gets less leg power into the stroke. And so to compensate, he often curves his swing upward into a more upward stroke to compenstate, ending with a higher follow through. 

Table Tennis Bucket List

A long time ago, when Pterodactyls ruled the skies, Jimmy Carter was president, and I had just graduated high school (1978), I put together a bucket list - things I wanted to someday do. Some of it was table tennis; some was writing; some was other things, like traveling to historical sites. At the time I was rated around 1800. (I didn't start until I was 16.)

Since you are a table tennis person (why else would you be reading this?), why not create your own table tennis bucket list? Here are some suggestions.

  1. Achieve a certain rating.
  2. Win a state or national title.
  3. Play table tennis in a certain number states.
  4. Play table tennis in a certain number of clubs. 
  5. Play at a U.S. Open or Nationals.
  6. Become proficient at multiple styles.
  7. Master a certain stroke you've never been able to do well.
  8. Start and/or run a club/tournament/league/training program.
  9. Become a USATT or ITTF certified coach.
  10. Become a USATT certified umpire.

Here is the bucket list I made. I've managed to do 14 of the 20, but still have a few to go.  (This was not the original order, which was scrawled in somewhat random order on a lined paper in very bad handwriting.)

  1. √ Break 2000. My highest rating was 2292, but with rating inflation, that's higher in modern ratings, though techniques have also improved even as the ratings inflated. I had about 50 ratings over 2250 without ever breaking 2300, alas.
  2. √ Win a state or national table tennis title. I've won 26 in college teams & doubles, and in hardbat.
  3. √ Coach a national table tennis champion. I've coached hundreds in junior national and junior Olympics.
  4. √ Write a book on table tennis. I've written seven.
  5. √ Visit all 50 U.S. states. The final one was New Hampshire in 2006.
  6. √ Tour China. Took a three-day tour after the 1995 Worlds, and visited the Great Wall, Tiananmen Square, the Forbidden Palace, and many other sites.
  7. √ Write a novel. I've written three, two published.
  8. √ Qualify for Science Fiction Writers of America. This requires selling either a novel or three short stories to a "professional market."
  9. √ Adopt a dog from a shelter. Sheeba was four when I adopted her in 2002, and she lived to be 16. This is her trying to get bacon.
  10. √ Own a house. I've owned it since 2001. I make the final payment on it in April, 2018.
  11. √ Visit Disneyworld. I went there for two days back in 1987 – I want to go again!
  12. √ Publish a cartoon. I had five or six published in my college newspaper – a career I wish I could have focused on. I also had this one published in USA Table Tennis Magazine. I also like to do play with pictures in Photoshop – here's probably the weirdest one I've ever created. There's also my Donald Trump table tennis one!
  13. √ Get published in a math or science journal. I had a paper published in Math and Computer Science Education Magazine in 1986 for solving the "Magic Rectangles" problem posed by Mark Gardner.
  14. √ Work at a zoo. I'm going to take credit for this, since I spent an entire summer working at the Insect Zoo at the National History Museum. But I'm not sure that's what I was thinking about at the time. (I took a day off last year to visit the Smithsonian National Zoo for the first time in probably 30 years.)
  15. Spend a week in the middle of nowhere with just a pile of books. I've sort of done this at home, but never "in the middle of nowhere." I just don't have the time – but I'm thinking I might make time sometime this next year.
  16. Tour the ancient ruins of Rome and Greece and the Great Pyramids. At least three times I've made plans, but again I've just never had the time, not to mention the cost.
  17. Visit all seven continents. I've only been to North America and Asia, alas. Only countries I've been to are USA, Canada, Mexico, China, Taiwan, and Japan – all as either coach of the USA Junior Team (Canada, Mexico, Taiwan, and of course USA) or as a table tennis writer (China and Japan).
  18. Spend a week at a major overseas training center. Came close to this as I was the team coach for the USA Junior Team that trained in a Taiwanese training center in 1994 for four days. But I'd like to spend time at either the Chinese National Training Center, the Werner Schlager Academy, or something like that.
  19. Patent an invention. I have a whole file on ideas that are likely patentable, but I've never had time to work on this.
  20. Ride in a helicopter or in a submarine with a view. Alas. 

Rhythm and Timing – Underrated Table Tennis Skills

Here's the new coaching article from Expert Table Tennis.

Backhand Sidespin Flick Tutorial – the Banana Flip

Here's the new coaching video (6:28) from William Henzell. This is one of the best tutorials on the shot I've ever seen. 

Interesting Table Tennis Training

Here's the video (2:02), which includes hitting targets and more conventional training.

Emma's First Swing Ping-Pong Lesson

Here's the video (67 sec). I wouldn't mind buying one for our club for the younger kids, but apparently it's only sold in France and Belgium.

ITTF Monthly Pongcast – August 2015

Here's the video (14:22).

Highlights from Austria Open Men's Final

Here's the video (2:02) of the best points between Jun Mizutani and Dimitrij Ovtcharov. That's Adam Bobrow doing the commentary.

Polish Video

Here's the video (32 sec) of what appears to be a preview of a tournament and then a sensational point.

Between Legs Shot at North American Championships

Here's the video (24 sec). That's Canada's Marko Medjugorac making the crazy shot as they score against USA's Timothy Wang and Kanak Jha.

Off-Table Inside-Out Around-the-Net Sidespin Backhand Counter-Smash from the Forehand Side

Here's the video of this fundamental shot that every beginner should master (21 sec, including slow motion replay).

North American Men's Team Champions on JibJab

Here's the video (66 sec). Can you name the players? (Spoiler - 60 seconds in you see all five. L-R: Jimmy Butler, Kanak Jha, Yahao Zhang, Coach Stefan Feth, Timothy Wang.)

May the Pong Be With You

Here's the picture of Darth Vader with light saber paddle from Mike Mezyan. (Here's the non-Facebook version.)

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Tip of the Week

Never Look for a Winner.

North American Championships

They were held this past weekend (Sat-Mon) in Toronto. Here's the ITTF page for the event, which has results, articles, pictures, quotes, and video. Here's the ITTF Press Release.

The big news is that USA swept everything over Canada, all eight events – Men's and Women's Singles and Teams, Cadet Boys' and Girls' Singles, and Junior Boys' and Girls' Teams. Historically, there have been many USA-Canada battles for many decades, and it's usually been competitive. But the strength and depth of USA Cadets is just too strong for Canada. As I've blogged a number of times, USA is stronger at the cadet level than it has ever been in history, and it's not even close. (Cadets is under 15, but due to dates used, some players are eligible after turning 15.)

But USA had to make two near miraculous comebacks to get the 8-0 sweep. In the Women's Singles Final, Lily Zhang (USA) was down 0-3 to Mo Zhang (CAN) before coming back to win 4-3. In the Men's Team Final, USA (Jim Butler, Timothy Wang, Kanak Jha) was down 0-2 before coming back to win 3-2. (Here's the match sheet.)

But USA overall dominance was rather obvious. In Women's Singles, seven of the eight quarterfinalists were USA, with Mo Zhang the only Canadian. In Men's Singles three of the four semifinalists were USA, including cadets Kanak Jha and Jack Wang. In Cadet Boys, all four semifinalists and seven of the eight quarterfinalists were USA. In Cadet Girls, all four semifinalists were USA.

The USA Cadet dominance showed even more in Junior Teams, which is for players under 18. The USA Boys' Team were all cadets, as were two of the three on the Junior Girls' Team, and both teams beat Canada 3-0.

I wasn't at the tournament but watched many of the matches online. Two things stood out: USA dominance at the cadet level, and all the illegal hidden serves – it's gotten even worse than I thought. I'll blog about that later, but the rampant cheating that is allowed in our sport is unbelievable. We've taught our kids that if you want to compete, you have to cheat. (I've blogged about this a lot, but rest assured I'm working on this – see this blog on hidden serves.)

In the Zone

Here's the new coaching article by Stephen Freedman with Clyde Young.

Ma Long Training

Here's the new video (2:01, includes slow motion).

Li Xiaodong on Serving

Here's the new video (23:28) from the Chinese coach.

Edmonton Junior Training

Here's the video (69 sec).

Multiball with Navin Kumar

Here's 95 seconds of my feeding multiball to Navin. (I've blogged numerous times about Navin, alias "The Bionic Man," who has a partially mechanical heart and Parkinson's.)

Hou Yingchao Wins Butterfly LA Open

Here's the article by Barbara Wei (with link to video), and here are the results. (Hou defeated Joo Saehyuk in the final.)

Table Tennis and Baseball

Here's the new article from Coach Jon.

With a Paddle, Tennis Stars Find They're Up the Creek

Here's the article from the New York Times.

11 Questions with Rahul Acharya

Here's the USATT Interview.

ITTF President Meets Tokyo 2020 President to Discuss Additional Gold

Here's the ITTF press release.

Kids Open in Dusseldorf

Here's the video (2:54).

Waldner, Persson, Appelgren

Here's the new video (2:32) featuring the Swedish legends.

Washington DC Council Plays Table Tennis

Here are 13 pictures, and here's an article. On the far side of the first picture is Jack Evans, DC Councilman and brother-in-law to Sheri Cioroslan (who many of you remember as former USATT President Sheri Soderberg Pittman). (I blogged about this briefly last Monday; here's the article on it.)

Andy Akiho's Ping Pong Concerto

Here's the short video (60 sec). Here's the article with link to the full version – over two hours!

El Bandito Richard McAfee

Here's the picture! (Here's the non-Facebook version.) Here's the rest of his gang.

More Mike Mezyan Pictures

NOTE - If you are unable to see these pictures, all you have to do is join the Table Tennis Group - it's easy! Here are all the past, present, and (soon) future pictures he's collected. (I pick out his best ones for here - he has more.)

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Larry,

I've read about the changes that you want to make to the service rule, such as requiring the ball to be visible to both the receiver and the entire net assembly (or at one point I think you mentioned making the serve visible to both umpires).  I think that these are positive changes and would be  a step in the right direction.  

 

But what do you think about the idea of simply reallowing hidden serves and switching to the seamed, two-colored ball that was used in the Chinese Super League at one point. Wouldn't this be a good way to level the playing field,  yet simultaneously negate some of the advantages of the server? Since modern receive techniques have advanced and the plastic ball is not as spinny as the old 38mm ball, would it not be okay to just say "Hey, let's just allow hidden serves again."

 

Just wanted to know your thoughts on this! Thanks.

In reply to by SchemeSC

My first choice is to fix the serving rule by requiring the ball not be hidden from the net or it's upward extension. If that doesn't pass, then I'd consider simply making hidden serves legal, since we're allowing it anyway. I'm still debating just how public I should go with all the pictures and video showing we have taught an entire generation of cadet boys that if they want to compete, they have to cheat. (I'm openminded to having a multi-color ball as well - sounds like a good idea.)