Serve & Serve Return Training Videos - A Closer Look

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Brian Pace takes you deeper into the Serve & Serve Return Training for Table Tennis Training videos, and he explains why the Serve and Return is the most complex part of Table Tennis. He explains why the new technique called "Point of View" filming is a much better training tool for the Serve Return.
If you are interested in mastering your Serve & Serve Return, their is no training video out that is more comprehensive than these videos.
Go to www.dynamictabletennis.com and start mastering your Serve & Serve Return

Пікірлер: 101

  • @michelepellegrino6640
    @michelepellegrino66402 жыл бұрын

    I'm so lucky to have found your channel, even if many years have already passed. Thank you for those videos, incredibly educative and entertaining.

  • @Drumming-Life
    @Drumming-Life7 жыл бұрын

    Brian, you have amazing control over the ball. I am very excited to have you as a video coach.

  • @zoomonme
    @zoomonme7 жыл бұрын

    You are truly an amazing coach! Much Respect

  • @knotwilg3596
    @knotwilg359611 жыл бұрын

    I agree with this. Professional level playing and teaching focuses on short serves, because these cannot be easily attacked. But at amateur level, fast deep serves run havock on the returns because players are not ready nor technically savvy. I think returning deep serves (on backhand) is an undervalued part of teaching.

  • @johnsamuel6632

    @johnsamuel6632

    4 жыл бұрын

    I agree with you. Fast & long serves fetch a lot of points at Amateur level

  • @LYNXROCK
    @LYNXROCK10 жыл бұрын

    Your videos are very helpful, greetings from Chile!

  • @FedorMachida
    @FedorMachida8 жыл бұрын

    Great idea and vid. I love this guy. I like his playstyle and how he likes to attack. I hope he can make a few more vids. using this camera perspective.

  • @MartinMagumajestic
    @MartinMagumajestic7 жыл бұрын

    Extremely functional and aidedsin my improvements in the service return.

  • @sangramrajeshirke9925
    @sangramrajeshirke99259 жыл бұрын

    Lovely technique to read & learn Underspin serve. Slow motion is nice to understand

  • @watsonzou3059
    @watsonzou305910 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for your high quality video, and i like the slow motion which make you understand how to serve and returning serve. Happy holidays! Happy all Ping pong players!

  • @yinyangthang
    @yinyangthang9 жыл бұрын

    Brian Pace is a master of his art.

  • @stevemojo2638
    @stevemojo263810 жыл бұрын

    Good stuff Bryan & you're so cool. You give everything in whatever you do.

  • @vinaypadayachee1216
    @vinaypadayachee12163 жыл бұрын

    Well explained Please make a video taking one type of of spin serve from.all angles on the table and show how to return that from a players view perspective , then take another type of spin serve and repeat - this will really help visualize and read spin together with his to return

  • @sonnybrown4758
    @sonnybrown475810 жыл бұрын

    This looks awesome.

  • @paparaopeddinti7094
    @paparaopeddinti70949 жыл бұрын

    it is very interesting and much use full to new lerners

  • @dinonaungayan9307
    @dinonaungayan930710 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your effort/

  • @rishabhrathore8161
    @rishabhrathore81618 жыл бұрын

    Very nice video keep making like these videos

  • @AgentSpektor
    @AgentSpektor10 жыл бұрын

    Nice and another tip always be crouched not too low and you'll be able to hit any kind of ball that's coming thanks for the advice I'm doing a bit better in tournaments and I'm getting like second and first place sometimes thx!

  • @Poseidon99Jeus
    @Poseidon99Jeus11 жыл бұрын

    You're really good buddy !!

  • @tatatatata2290
    @tatatatata22907 жыл бұрын

    That's a great channel

  • @khevinzkyrad18
    @khevinzkyrad1810 жыл бұрын

    I am now a fan, nice video by the way

  • @DynamicTableTennisTV

    @DynamicTableTennisTV

    10 жыл бұрын

    Thanks a bunch. I working on some more cool stuff. Stay tuned.

  • @khevinzkyrad18

    @khevinzkyrad18

    10 жыл бұрын

    uhmm hey man im a player my self a question ive been wanting to wanting to ask how do you stop the ball mid air???

  • @haeyeongpark4242
    @haeyeongpark42426 жыл бұрын

    Wow!!your so good In table tennis I like Ur Moves

  • @1athleticfreak
    @1athleticfreak11 жыл бұрын

    Where did you have the point of view camera in this video?

  • @ashiwinibhosale5315
    @ashiwinibhosale53156 жыл бұрын

    Best video

  • @fazobaza
    @fazobaza11 жыл бұрын

    Isn't it a Xu Xin at 0:39 ? Anyway, Brian I really appreciate your videos and engagement in what you do.

  • @user-rt4yo3xy4y
    @user-rt4yo3xy4y5 жыл бұрын

    Great, we should learn serve return like a first person shooting game.

  • @eng_elnahla
    @eng_elnahla7 жыл бұрын

    what about returning it using the Flick technique ?!

  • @sfwz229
    @sfwz2299 жыл бұрын

    nice vid

  • @cwarim22
    @cwarim227 жыл бұрын

    What is the best rubber?

  • @Scarcorleon1
    @Scarcorleon17 жыл бұрын

    I've been playing recreational for some years and now I'm taking it serious. I need some suggestions on a good paddle. My style is fast and I use power. Any suggestions on a lighter paddle? Thanks

  • @Joseph-xt1fm

    @Joseph-xt1fm

    2 жыл бұрын

    Best handling / feeling (with plus 2 layers Carbon-Power in the racket) I had with the "Donic Waldner Senso Carbon V2". This racket produces a lot ammount of extra-spin (allround+). It's lighter then the average blades (Senso-Technique> 77-80gram). Or a Stiga with WRB-Technique (that's light too, and cause WRB more balanced for a allround-offensive style). Stiga is always a good choice to step forward in game quality aspects. (But I would highly recommend a "Allround" blade, that's better for development when beginning with more training. Control is much more important then speed!!! Maybe later a "Stiga Allround Carbon". Stiga offers in some regions 4 handle-grip variants! I love the "Erik Lindh" grip-handle-style. Both are not expensive, appr. 40$.

  • @Nutelko8
    @Nutelko810 жыл бұрын

    You played Xu Xin? How did it ended?

  • @carlbecker4465
    @carlbecker44658 жыл бұрын

    Is This your Full Time Job, because u putting a lot of work in your VideosGreat Content Keep it up.

  • @et9120
    @et91209 жыл бұрын

    The serve at 0:17 is currently whats goving me big problems. It's a "go to" serve for one of my opponents because I struggle to return it. My question is, should I try to fast loop the serve, or must it be a slow loop? I often run into issues where the serve is short, or middle-long.

  • @Joseph-xt1fm

    @Joseph-xt1fm

    2 жыл бұрын

    When a short service to return/handle, better let fall the ball deeper for hit-return and to give the ball short back, close as possible behind the net and with a little backspin. If it's a long service, only one bounce on your table side, then it's much better to loop/spin the return in the middle of the table (in best case close to the ellbow or stomach area from the opponent).That gives you in the beginning confidence and forces the opponent to choose from his back-/forehand. This milli-seconds confusion will probably give you with the next contact the oppornunity to attack more dynamic with wider angle-range at the table. And with this tactic you can avoid to get from start in trouble or under pressure. The final stroke for point in the best case with the 3rd contact, not with the 1st or 2nd.

  • @edsonfeitosa3794
    @edsonfeitosa37947 жыл бұрын

    Gostaria de ver o vídeo com legenda!

  • @orionilian
    @orionilian7 жыл бұрын

    Which part of the ball touch you when use topspin serve? More bottom,middle or top ? Thank you

  • @Joseph-xt1fm

    @Joseph-xt1fm

    2 жыл бұрын

    Bottom. B'cause you hit the ball in the downgoing phase. You have to to go more in the knees then, with a bigger swing preparation at start and a "end-blade-outswing" in the top-direction, closer to your body (not in direction from the opponent). You have lay much more spin then average in this heavy-slow-counter-strike! If you take the ball direct after the bouncing, in the upgoing phase, the ball is hard to control, forces you to mistakes too, opponent could attack a uncontrolled-high-tower-return immidiatly and with much pressure on you. Contact time from ball and blade mu ch long as possible, it's a spinny ball you make, not a short hit at top of the ball straight forward, more a spinny high curve, that gives you time to prepare for the next ball too... not shoot, not striking hard, better with much contacht from the deep until the endswing, you leading the ball with your racket instead to bashing it powerful forward (will go in the net then).

  • @Joseph-xt1fm

    @Joseph-xt1fm

    2 жыл бұрын

    For practising this high-rotation-spinny-game-opener, there is a helpful device in the most club's: "The wheel (of torture!"). Try it, it's a much helpful device to get comfortable with this kind of a game-opener. Normally your opponent will try to block your return, cause the spin forces him to do so! To avoid for you a "unheahlty" block-ball-placement, I would recommend to "heavy-spin-rotate" this first-game-opener-ball in the middle and close to the end of the table. To block this ball, will be much more nasty, even for very good and experienced players! Because he must then block in front of his body. It's then an much more uncomfortable body-positioning that he has quick to fullfill and it's including higher possibillities for unforced errors by him. (Btw: always and for everybody it's including higher error-statistics!). And a much sophisticated and complicated wrist-regulation-task he had then to face and to solve. Exactly: it's then much more difficult for him, "to open/to close the blade" correctly. (And at the same time he has to calculating the incoming amount of spin/rotation in his mind). When he has to block a ball with high-rotation/-spin, you will then see often at the beginning of the game, that he will make much more unforced errors then usual😉 In germany we say: "to play like a chipmunk", collecting all easy to get/affortable points without risking to make unforced errors byself. With more and more game time, the chipmunk will transform from a point-collectier to point-hunting-hawk😉).

  • @harshupreti1526
    @harshupreti15267 жыл бұрын

    what is the serve that you use .pls do reply our comments😂

  • @christianadriananiceta2753
    @christianadriananiceta27538 жыл бұрын

    Hi :D can I get some advice... As a short pips-out hitter I try to make my serving motion identical... I mixed in short underspin serves with topsin/ side-top spin serves.. The ball will either go down the net or pops out the table... which I think works well.. My problem is that when I mixed in side spin serves.. My opponents seems comfortable returning it and don't have much trouble.. how do I improve side spin serves? is it ball placement? or is it because I can't generate much spin with short pips? p.s I also mixed in long and fast serves ( down the line and cross court which seems to work well). Do you have any advice or tips? I tried to do reverse pendulum serve but it is hard to make the motion identical to my other serves.

  • @sursurrus

    @sursurrus

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Christian Adrian Aniceta Shakehands or Penhold? In either case pips out inherently generates less spin. No sponge, drastically less spin. This explains everything you mention: Your 2 effective serves are b/c your opponents are used to playing against inverted and drastically overestimate the amt of spin you're generating. I'd bet the _underspin_ serve is being pushed long and the _side-top_ is going into the net. The reason the sidespin doesn't work is that a light sidespin effectively functions as a light topspin [sidespin is complicated] which everyone is used to hitting. My basic advice, use fast serves to set up your hitting game with the occasional serve you do now to keep them honest. Once you start playing people with experience against short pips they will tee off on your spinny serves if you do them every point.

  • @christianadriananiceta2753

    @christianadriananiceta2753

    8 жыл бұрын

    sursurrus I'm a penholder and first time to play with a lot of different people yesterday ( I mostly play with just my friends who doesn't even have proper equipment) .. I won a lot of points just by serves.. they said that I had a very spinny serve which I doubt and I think what you said is correct.. I also learned how to serve with my inverted rubber without turning my other side of bat ( not as good and deceptive as Liu and Wang Zeng Yi)

  • @christianadriananiceta2753

    @christianadriananiceta2753

    8 жыл бұрын

    sursurrus you are also correct that my underspin together along with side top spin most of the time went to the net.. specially with penholders... there are times they pop out side the table too

  • @christianadriananiceta2753

    @christianadriananiceta2753

    8 жыл бұрын

    sursurrus tnx for the advice.. for now I am trying to learn high ball toss serve of Liu ( I know he is known to be the best server but at least I can dream XD). I also want to learn deadball serve and reverse underspin serve (trying to make them identical to my usual serving form) I am currently using 802-40 short pips and focus snipe 3 for rpb with Pg7 blade short handle.. might change to stiga clippa soon (I had been playing table tennis for 6 months ). Once again I thank you.

  • @sursurrus

    @sursurrus

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Christian Adrian Aniceta You're welcome. Developing a good serve is very tough! I spent a lot of time practicing it, thats the only way to get better. Get a box of balls, practice without opponent There's ways to tell how much spin you are generating - watch ball's path in the air, how it bounces, etc even without an opponent to return it. Don't worry too much about copying Ma Long serves ;) For what you are doing, the RPB with inverted might be the best way to do spinny serves. Focus on good contact - exaggerated grazing motion for maximum spin, keeping the ball low, and controlling distance (short vs long). On A 'good' spinny serve you shouldn't be able to see the label on the ball. Goodluck!

  • @errol120
    @errol1208 жыл бұрын

    all sports you either have in you or not, i have seen lots of good players fall short in games with good serve, chinese take table tennis sport as a war,while other countrys take it as a sport , if you want to be good in table tennis your passion as to be 100 percent and your mental power as to be very strong to win and never show your weakness on the table ,and always remember there will always some body to kick your ass,,, so just do your own thing and try to copy as much from good players ,do not scare to play good players ,it is just a game. if you really love table tennis do not cheat your self buy good rubbers and frame, and spoil your self...also good shoes, try to play aleast three times a week, good focus and concentration comes from good food and lots of vitamins ,,,,,your head must be like a time boma ready to play,

  • @abdullahmarei-karate3225

    @abdullahmarei-karate3225

    8 жыл бұрын

    you are 100% true. all the respect.

  • @zZDanylorZz

    @zZDanylorZz

    8 жыл бұрын

    +errol You are right :)

  • @atmandeshmane3838

    @atmandeshmane3838

    7 жыл бұрын

    Respect man! which country are you from

  • @ppri9438
    @ppri943810 жыл бұрын

    good

  • @ignacionagy7243
    @ignacionagy72438 жыл бұрын

    2:30 dead boll serve?

  • @geitekop507
    @geitekop50710 жыл бұрын

    Now, now, now. I thank you for the advice, yet you must understand, that I just don't feel like using my forehand. Of course, I use my forehand, but I use my backhand more. Still, thanks for the advice. ;)

  • @DayatHidayat
    @DayatHidayat2 жыл бұрын

    Goods

  • @pholioschenouda5395
    @pholioschenouda53958 жыл бұрын

    Plzzzzz I need: Timo Boll Ma Long Zhang Jike serving techniques plzzzzzzzzz

  • @benpork8533
    @benpork853310 жыл бұрын

    You seem to be really good at tt.

  • @dennykurniawan4545

    @dennykurniawan4545

    9 жыл бұрын

    He entered TT tournament that is why he is making video

  • @furyyoshiki
    @furyyoshiki6 жыл бұрын

    Is he Kolo Toure?

  • @espukr
    @espukr11 жыл бұрын

    trouble is slow short serves are easy to practice... plenty of time to see the ball coming, plenty of time to think about... (plus lots of practice-partners can do them) - different story with faster servers top/side spin to the back hand. They're harder to wind-up on and I think they cause the most trouble for players that would be wanting to buy a video like this.

  • @user-qp6qo5jk6m
    @user-qp6qo5jk6m5 жыл бұрын

    طریقه دانلود از یو تیوب چگونه است

  • @azharikurniawan4059
    @azharikurniawan40597 жыл бұрын

    i love tenis meja

  • @HySly23
    @HySly239 жыл бұрын

    what is that serve called in 0:17

  • @DynamicTableTennisTV

    @DynamicTableTennisTV

    9 жыл бұрын

    Backhand Sidespin/Underspin Serve

  • @HySly23

    @HySly23

    9 жыл бұрын

    Ok thx!!

  • @kyawsein6632

    @kyawsein6632

    9 жыл бұрын

  • @MrNuigit
    @MrNuigit11 жыл бұрын

    Didn't speak very well at the start but picked up at the end :)

  • @alaafikry6148
    @alaafikry61489 жыл бұрын

    it is very interesting thank you so much

  • @sagatbalrog
    @sagatbalrog9 жыл бұрын

    hey its theo huxtable

  • @blurnv
    @blurnv7 жыл бұрын

    Serve at 0:56 is a fault, is it not? Seems like the ball was hidden behind your shoulder.

  • @geitekop507
    @geitekop50711 жыл бұрын

    I shall tell you, I almost never use my forehand. I always use my backhand, and I don't have any trouble with this.

  • @Joseph-xt1fm

    @Joseph-xt1fm

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's really the best option! For the most pro-players a kind of a "backhand-banana-flip" is the first choice to counter short backspin-services above the table. But it's an masterpiece to create aggressive flipping moves above the table and extremly close to net. That's absolutly the most prefered "high society move" from the magicians and tricksters of table tennis😊 The physics of the hand and the wrist, only allowing with the backhand such winding and snapping movements! And with a special equipment, it's possible to support such an aggressive flip-tactic. Most pro-players prefering cause this reason (and for more fleibility when serving) straight handles.are blade, "Scholdkröt Futec from 1994". Perfect bro'!😃👍

  • @geitekop507

    @geitekop507

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Joseph-xt1fm Sorry to say, I've quite table-tennis. Nonetheless, a fun read.

  • @joshuabanacia3870
    @joshuabanacia38708 жыл бұрын

    please give me a table tennis racket :) i really love playing table tennis but we dont have much money to buy a good racket

  • @odysseypaintball3004

    @odysseypaintball3004

    8 жыл бұрын

    make one!

  • @Joseph-xt1fm

    @Joseph-xt1fm

    2 жыл бұрын

    If you really want a racket, please tell/confirm me this statement one more time again. I will send you then, with much pleasure, a very good one. Of course with pro-rubbers, special prepared, cut and glued only for you. (I was poor when I was a child, I know how this feels). I promise!

  • @sagatisbeast
    @sagatisbeast8 жыл бұрын

    train me ☺ I want to beat my friend. It's his serve I have a hard time with but this video helped but i want to train regardless. lol

  • @ghostdrago8598
    @ghostdrago85988 жыл бұрын

    I made my own serve its called Super Saiyan Serving ball no player can Block that.

  • @xiomamadeus100
    @xiomamadeus10011 жыл бұрын

    красавчиик

  • @debdeepchakraborty6858

    @debdeepchakraborty6858

    6 жыл бұрын

    Full picher

  • @knotwilg3596
    @knotwilg359611 жыл бұрын

    Then you are playing poor opponents. No offence, but if you play backhand only, at a certain level this weakness will be exposed. Any player should try to cover about 3/4 of the table with forehand and 1/4 with backhand, the reason being that the forehand loop has much more potential swing, hence power. I believe what you say, but it definitely holds back your development as a player.

  • @louishenderson4516
    @louishenderson45165 жыл бұрын

    TIPS TO GET INTO COACHING AFTER GETTING YOUR LEVEL 1

  • @sonnydang9193
    @sonnydang919310 жыл бұрын

    Bo

  • @adbrans9221
    @adbrans922110 жыл бұрын

    in nederlands ondertiteling s.v.p

  • @avishkawenura512
    @avishkawenura51210 жыл бұрын

    mr.pace can i have your email address

  • @MyThoughtsBelow
    @MyThoughtsBelow8 жыл бұрын

    the slow mo, stop motion stuff kills me. It's good but sometimes it's a little much

  • @DynamicTableTennisTV

    @DynamicTableTennisTV

    8 жыл бұрын

    Slo Mo is valuable for players trying to learn. The people that purchased my videos requested that I put in more Slo Mo, and that is what I did.

  • @MyThoughtsBelow

    @MyThoughtsBelow

    8 жыл бұрын

    I understand. You have great content and clearly you and the majority should make the final decision, I'm just putting it out there that slowing down every aspect of the bounce (with no sound) is really difficult for me to watch, personally.

  • @DynamicTableTennisTV

    @DynamicTableTennisTV

    8 жыл бұрын

    +MyThoughtsBelow i have 148 videos for you to learn.

  • @ernestobrien2138

    @ernestobrien2138

    7 жыл бұрын

    MyThoughtsBelow qA

  • @yudhvirbisht2503

    @yudhvirbisht2503

    7 жыл бұрын

    DynamicTableTennisTV

  • @IvanGreguricOrtolan
    @IvanGreguricOrtolan10 жыл бұрын

    like it's worth asking :/

  • @khairulasyrafzakaria4782
    @khairulasyrafzakaria478211 жыл бұрын

    than u should master your backhand first

  • @georgeenculescu7005
    @georgeenculescu700511 жыл бұрын

    to much tolking

  • @ppri9438
    @ppri943810 жыл бұрын

    good

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