Added: 5 years ago
From: genwei007
Views: 140,046
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  • 有幾難、、打得多就識、、

  • 唔明

  • 轉拍都十幾萬人睇-,-

  • 好型! Fake起對手!

  • 低能-.-

    轉拍都好睇,

    比你昆到我入黎..

  • @dogdog20032003 =.=應對唔同左LO,你反唔反應得切

  • @dogdog20032003

    係用直拍轉wo,難好多ga

  • @tommylcf2a19 我16年前成日打...天官校隊2年 (轉校), 97年屯門精英隊...我覺得唔難...因我成日都轉...

  • so incredibly fast!

  • wtf

  • 这就是技术!

  • if you play table tennis you would notice the black side of the rubber is usually more sticky than the red side may be he try to give more spins on the serve? black side is for defence and red is for attack or may be he try to change to defences position?

  • no it's purely to confuse the opponent...

    he's not taking the next shot.

    this is only done in doubles...

  • You dont know what your talking about, there many different types of rubber and red or black can be played on forehand or backhand, depends on what the player likes black side doesnt mean its nore stickier, he may have anti-spin on his black side to fool the opponent in his serve or not, it could be anything. You must be a sports bar player, theres alot you must not know about this sport from your comment. Know what ur talkin about b4 you comment. :3

  • @vageta9281984

    Actually, dying something can change it's characteristics. The way Chinese rubber is made, it's originally black. Adding red dye can result in a loss in tackiness. That's science for ya.

  • And also, the more defense you play, the less stickyness you want, thats why most choppers or defenders play with anti-spin or pips, which have almost no stickyness at all, pips actually reverses the spin. :3

  • the production process involved in making rubbers makes the black side tackier so its better for serves

  • Production process??, where do you get your information from?, I have bought hundreds of sheets of rubber and the color of the rubber does not mean a thing, its whatever a player prefers. Yes there are rubbers that are tackier than others but they can be red or black, doesnt matter. Some players use black for forehand and red for backhand but none of that matters, im a tournament lvl player and ive done my homework on all the different types of rubbers used.

  • thats understandable if you play euro/jap rubbers. on chinese rubbers the tackiness between black and red is highly apparent, espcially for very tacky ones like hurricanes.

  • Thats mainly what I use is chinese rubber, I first started playing with chinese rubber and its tricky because its so tacky, but if I buy 2 sheets of the same rubber, the black sheet isnt going to be tackier than the red, weather its from asia or europe. Not sayin that every player's rubbers are the same on both sides, Ma Lin may have a whole different type of rubber on his black side which he likes to serve with, and all serves are not with the blk side only. I randomly change just to distract..

  • @vageta9281984

    Pips actually don't reverse the spin on a block. Inverted rubber reverses spin. If you're send topspin and you block it with flat rubber, what you send to your opponent will be topspin to them, but backspin to you. Spin reversal.

  • SO FAST~

  • haha

  • Ah, Ma Lin twiddles his paddle right before the serve. I can see the way he's holding it at the end of the point before but doesn't he usually use black rubber for his forehand side? Maybe red is better for pre-serve fanning =D

  • ... well if you watch it closely the guy flipped his paddle in a splitting second

  • what happened??

  • it's 13,022 now...

  • 24.119^^

    Maybe he built a small fan inside his paddle^^

  • HAHA someone get this off YouTube!

    nearly 8 thousand views lol. HAHAHA

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