serve-receiving posture
When receiving and serving, the body should be on the middle and close to the table, the feet should be level with the shoulders, lift the heels, and be ready to move back and forth and left and right at any time. The position of the racket should be slightly higher than the table, so that you can catch the ball inside the table and pull out the billiards.
First, determine whether it is a long or short ball. It depends on the distance of the opponent's first serving point from the net. Generally, short balls are coming close to the grid, and long balls are coming close to the bottom line.
The ball is short-shot
1. You should carefully observe the direction of the first jump after the ball falls on the table. If it is upward, it means it is downward rotation, and if it is forward rotation, it is upward rotation.
2. If you pause after falling off the stage, you will spin downward, if you move forward at a constant speed, you will not rotate, and if you accelerate, you will spin upward. downspin will give you a feeling of standing up, which is very obvious.
3. The second arc has a steep downward rotation, and the low and flat ones have a steep upward rotation.
4. The overall feeling of change in rhythm is, the one that is fast first and then slow is the downward spin, and the one that is slow first and then fast is the top spin.
The best service is to use the blast friction of the wrist to achieve rotation or non-rotation. is usually smaller and more stable when the short serve is down. When the ball does not rotate or is spinning, it uses force downwards, and relies on the ball to hit the upper edge or exerts force sideways to send the ball. At this time, you should pay attention to the way he uses force.
But this is just an auxiliary method, and it mainly depends on observing the ball, because what he sends is what the ball is, and what is deceiving you is all his "performance". After the opponent's first arc is long, when you know that the incoming ball is a short ball, you should step forward in time, quickly enter the stage and relax.
determines the rotation as soon as the ball falls on the table. When the ball has been cleared when it passes through the net, when the ball is on the top spin, the wrist must go from loose to tight, and move forward and return to the ball by impact. When the ball is downspin, after the wrist touches the ball, it suddenly becomes nervous and exerts force forward and upward, rubbing against the explosive force of the wrist.
The ball is a long ball
judging method is the same as the judgment of a short ball, otherwise. The same applies to rotation judgment.
In addition, the entire arc feels like the ball is floating downward, the forward drills upward, and the slightly upward jumps downward, and the rotation does not turn.
Note: The up and down spin of a long ball is more difficult to judge than a short ball, and the return ball is more likely to be attacked. So pay special attention to whether the opponent exerts his or her force when touching the ball, whether it is upward or downward.
Note: It is to observe the opponent's movement when touching the ball, not the last action!
Because the long ball's hidden serve is usually large, in order to ensure that the arc and speed of the ball are not much different, on the one hand, you should use a big move to shake your eyes, and on the other hand, you will use a downward press to make you think it is a downward spin, or use a false move to lift up after serving to make you think it is a top spin.
Reminder: All judgments must be made clearly the moment the ball crosses the net, and at the latest it must make a decision before the second jump, otherwise there will be no time to catch the ball.