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The Correct Way of Stretching for Table Tennis by Coach Meinhard Korte

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(by Coach Meinhard Korte)

The biggest mistak table tennis player make with stretching is doing long static stretches before training.

  • Before training: dynamic mobility + activation
  • After training: static stretching + recovery

Before Training (8–12 min)
Goal:

  • Raise body temperature
  • Activate movement patterns
  • Improve reaction speed
  • Reduce injury risk

Avoid holding stretches longer than 5–10 seconds before play.

1. Light Cardio (2–3 min)
Choose one:

  • Jogging
  • Jump rope
  • Side shuffles
  • Shadow footwork

This increases blood flow and joint lubrication.

2. Dynamic Mobility Routine
Dynamic Circles:

  • Forward × 15
  • Backward × 15

Good for shoulder mobility and forehand/backhand mechanics.

Torso Rotations
Stand athletic stance and rotate side to side.

  • 20 repetitions

Important for:

  • Looping
  • Serving
  • Recovery movement

Leg Swings
Front/back and side-to-side.

  • 10–15 each leg

Helps:

  • Hip mobility
  • Footwork range
  • Balance

Walking Lunges with Rotation

  • 10 each side

Activates:

  • Glutes
  • Hips
  • Core rotation

Ankle Mobility
Knee-over-toe ankle drives.

  • 10 each side

Very important for low stance movement.

Wrist Warm-Up

  • Wrist circles
  • Open/close fists
  • Gentle forearm flexion

Table tennis overloads wrists and forearms.

3. Sport-Specific Activation (2–4 min)
Shadow Strokes

  • Forehand loops
  • Backhand counters
  • Serve motion

Gradually increase speed.

Short Footwork Bursts

  • Side-to-side shuffle
  • Crossover movement
  • In/out movement

This transitions your body into match speed.

After Training (10–15 Minutes)
Now static stretching is beneficial.

Goal:

  • Reduce stiffness
  • Restore mobility
  • Improve recovery
  • Reduce overuse injuries

Hold stretches:

  • 20–40 seconds
  • Slow breathing
  • No bouncing

Best Post-Training Stretches
Hamstring Stretch

How:

  • Keep back straight
  • Hinge at hips
  • Stretch behind leg

Hip Flexor Stretch
Table tennis players get tight hips from constant crouching.

How:

  • Kneeling lunge
  • Push hips forward gently

Calf Stretch
Important for explosive footwork.

How:

  • Wall stretches
  • Heel flat on floor

Glute Stretch
Good for rotational recovery and lower back relief.

How:

  • Seated figure-4 stretch

Chest & Shoulder Stretch
Counteracts forward shoulder posture.

How:

  • Doorway stretches
  • Arm across chest stretch

Forearm/Wrist Stretch
One of the most important for table tennis players.

Stretch both:

  • Wrist flexors
  • Wrist extensors

Especially important if:

  • Looping heavily
  • Serving a lot
  • Multiball training

Best Order
Before Practice

  1. Cardio
  2. Dynamic mobility
  3. Activation
  4. Shadow strokes
  5. Start rallying

After Practice

  1. Cool down walk
  2. Static stretching
  3. Hydrate
  4. Protein + carbs recovery

Common Mistakes
Don’t Do This Before Playing

  • Long toe-touch holds
  • Deep static hamstring stretching
  • Overstretching cold muscles

This can reduce explosiveness and reaction speed.

Don’t Skip Ankles and Hips
Most table tennis movement problems start there.
Limited ankle mobility causes:

  • Slow recovery
  • Higher stance
  • Knee stress

Don’t Stretch Aggressively
Stretching should reduce tension, not create pain.

Recommended Frequency

  • Dynamic warm-up: every session
  • Static stretching: after every session
  • Longer mobility session: 2–3× weekly

Areas Table Tennis Players Should Prioritize Most

  1. Hips
  2. Ankles
  3. Thoracic spine
  4. Hamstrings
  5. Wrists/forearms
  6. Shoulders

These have the biggest impact on:

  • Footwork
  • Recovery speed
  • Power generation
  • Injury prevention
  • Consistency late in matches

 

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