Site Products
Top Ten Ways to Turn a Match Around

Top Ten Ways to Turn a Match Around

By Larry Hodges

The first four are psychological, the rest are tactical ideas.

1.      Remember the mentality and feel of a great match you’ve played, and get back into that mode.

2.      Take ten seconds to stare at something in the distance to clear your mind.

3.      With nothing to lose, relax, have fun, and just play.

4.      Ignore the score and just play the next point. Repeat.

5.      Attack elbow with backhand. Most players have trouble against an aggressive shot right at their playing elbow, and the easiest way to do that is with the backhand, where you are facing the opponent and so can see his elbow. Do it over and over in rallies and watch him crumble. (Exception – if you’re playing an all-out forehand attacker, then go for the wide corners.)

6.      Short no-spin serve. They are harder to push heavy, low, or short, and tend to pop up. And if the serve is very low, they are surprisingly hard to attack effectively. So serve and attack! Mix them up with backspin serves.

7.      Slow, spinny, consistent loops. Missing your loop? Then slow it down and go for lots of topspin. You’ll be surprised how many players fall apart against this.

8.      Quick-push serves back wide. Can’t stop the opponent’s serve and attack against your push return? Are you giving him easy pushes, or are you quick-pushing the serve quick off the bounce into a wide corner? To the backhand will likely disarm him, to the forehand will likely catch him off guard. (If you have good touch and have practiced this, you can also push them short.)

9.      Stop and think about how you are winning and losing points. Then pick a winning service pattern, and one or two other tactics that will win.

10.  Talk to a coach or top player between games or in a time-out. He might see something you have not. Or just talk to anyone between games, and you’ll be amazed at how talking it out makes it obvious what you need to do.

Latest News

This is It: Championship Week in Philly

April 10, 2025
(by: Major League Table Tennis) History is Calling 📞 Who Will Take the Title? Championship Weekend is finally… Read More

Bowmar Sports Tournament Highlights – 2024 US Open Amber Lin Finals Highlights

April 10, 2025
(by: Bowmar Sports) In this Bowmar Sports Tournament Highlights, Amber Lin explains her strategy in the Finals at… Read More

Jenson Van Emburgh’s Return to International Competitions

April 9, 2025
(by Steve Hopkins) ​After an eight-month hiatus following the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games, American para table tennis athlete… Read More

Lee Sangsu Makes History at the 2025 WTT Champions Incheon!

April 9, 2025
(by Bowmar Sports) Congratulations to Lee Sangsu for becoming the first Korean player to reach the final of… Read More

Edmarie León Shines at the WTT Youth Contender Humacao

April 9, 2025
(by Edgardo Vázquez) The WTT Youth Contender Humacao 2025 was marked by the talent and determination of Edmarie… Read More

Butterfly Training Tips with Emily Tan – Forehand Pendulum Short and Long Serve

April 9, 2025
(by: Bowman Sports) In this Butterfly Training Tips, Emily Tan is executing the Forehand Pendulum Short and Long… Read More

Calderano Announces Departure from TTBL

April 8, 2025
(by Steve Hopkins) Another big announcement could cause seismic shifts in the upcoming 2025-26 TTBL.  Hugo Calderano, the… Read More

Butterfly Training Tips with Sanuka Herath – Backhand, Middle, Backhand and wide Forehand drill

April 8, 2025
(by: Bowmar Sports) In this Butterfly Training Tips, Sanuka Herath is executing the Stroke Chemistry drill Backhand, Middle,… Read More
View All News

Get the latest from Butterfly

Stay “In The Loop” with Butterfly professional table tennis equipment, table tennis news, table tennis technology, tournament results, and We Are Butterfly players, coaches, clubs and more.