Backhand Counter

By Larry Hodges

In modern table tennis, the forehand is usually the more powerful shot – the point winner. But as rallies get faster and fast, the backhand counter becomes more and more important. If you don’t have a good backhand, you’re at a big disadvantage. At tournaments, in match after match, I find opponents who don’t know how to score with their backhands. Even worse, they don’t know how to stop their opponents from scoring with theirs.

Lobbing

By Larry Hodges

In 1967, Nobuhiko Hasegawa shocked the table tennis world by not only winning the World Championships, but by using the lob as a primary weapon in doing so. Since then, the lob has become the most spectacular shot in table tennis for both players and fans. It has also become one of the least understood shots in the game.

Counterlooping

By Larry Hodges

Table tennis is supposed to be fun. And nothing (except perhaps lobbing) is as fun as counterlooping. There is something magical about throwing yourself into the ball from off the table and arcing the ball back on the table with topspin. If you haven’t counterlooped, you’ve missed out on quite a lot--but you have a lot to look forward to. Unlike lobbing, however, counterlooping is an important part of most top player’s games, and if you’re a serious player, you need to learn how to do it.

Looping Spin Serves

By Larry Hodges

Many players practice looping against both backspin and topspin, against blocks, pushes, chops and loops, even against (!) lobs. However, once they get into a game, they find all this practice to no avail as they loop serve after serve off the end or into the net.
The problem is they are not used to looping against a sidespin serve. There are two things to be considered when doing so.

Contact The Ball As Low As You Can When Serving

By Larry Hodges

One of the most underrated strengths in table tennis is the ability to serve very low. How high your serve bounces on the far side of the table makes a big difference in how much clearance your opponent has in returning it. A very low serve means the opponent has to lift the ball, which makes an aggressive return difficult. A higher serve gives the receiver the clearance to be more aggressive.

The High Toss Serve

By Larry Hodges

One of the most effective serves in table tennis is the high-toss serve. First used effectively by the Chinese, it is now used, at least sometimes, by almost all top players. Since the ball drops further on the high-toss than on the short toss, and so at contact point is traveling much faster than it would otherwise, the high-toss server can often deceptively throw an opponent’s timing off by unpredictably choosing to put more or less spin on the ball than he would normally.