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PLAYING CHOPPERS
By Larry
Hodges, USATT Certified National Coach
There is
nothing more infuriating than losing to a patient chopper who lets
you beat yourself with your own errors. Losing to a chopper is like
four-putting in golf; you may have made some good drives to get to
the green, but all you remember are the misses at the end. Rather
than four-putting forever, let’s learn how to beat the chopper.
A
chopper is weakest in the middle, but you have more table (and so
more margin for error) by going diagonally to a corner. Going for a
winner down the line often catches the chopper by surprise. A
chopper who is not particularly fast is vulnerable at the corners; a
chopper with inverted on both sides is more vulnerable in the
middle. Keep these "basics" in mind when playing any of the
following styles. There are three general ways of playing a chopper.
Informally they are called European style, Asian style, and
Chiseling.
European
Style
The goal
here is to bring the chopper in close to the table, and then attack
hard, especially at the chopper’s middle. The chopper is too close
to the table to make the return, and so misses. When using this
technique, you should mostly serve short to bring the chopper in,
and try to follow with a strong attack. Sometimes, however, fake the
attack, and push short instead - the chopper, in his haste to back
up for the expected attack, will have trouble with this ball, and
will often have to make a last-second lunge to return it. Even if he
makes the return (often a weak one), he will be left jammed over the
table and vulnerable to the next ball, which you can promptly loop
for a winner. If the chopper stays closer to the table to guard
against this drop shot, then you attack. The chopper has absolutely
no way of answering this ... in theory.
During a
rally, if the chopper makes a good return from away from the table,
push short again, and start over. The object in a rally is to catch
the chopper too far away from the table or moving backward so that
you can drop the ball short, force him to rush in, and attack when
he is jammed up against the table. Alternatively, you can push a few
balls, keeping the chopper close to the table, and then attack when
you think he’s not expecting it.
Asian
Style
The goal
here is to control the spin and pace of the rally. This method is
especially good against a long-pipped chopper, but takes regular
practice against a chopper to learn to do effectively. Pips-out
players are especially good at this style, but many good inverted
players also play this way. This style doesn’t work well against an
all-inverted chopper who chops very heavy. Let’s assume you are
playing a long-pipped chopper.
Here the
aim is to get the chopper off the table, and then attack relatively
softly over and over, into the long pips side, but not with full
spin. The chopper can only return whatever spin you give him because
of the long pips, and so their returns are not particularly heavy,
making your continuous soft attack easy. After topspinning a few
balls, you find one you like and loop or smash a winner.
Depending on what you are more comfortable with, you can topspin
many balls in a row before going for a winner, or only a few - be
unpredictable. Some players just topspin over and over, not going
for a winner unless they get a very easy one. You should try to vary
your spin, sometimes looping very dead, sometimes spinny. However,
beware of varying spin returns when you vary your own spin. For
example, when you give heavy topspin, expect heavy chop, and so
either lift the ball more on next shot, or push and start over.
Don’t fall into the trap of spinning heavily over and over – a
chopper loves it, and all you’ll get are heavy chop returns, which
can be very difficult to loop consistently.
You can
mix in pushing, but too much pushing will throw your own timing off.
By topspinning over and over to the long pips side (but not with
full spin), you can build up a rhythm that a chopper will have
difficulty breaking.
Try to
get down to almost eye level with the ball by bending your knees.
This will help your consistency by making the lifting easier and
will get your eyes closer to the ball so you see it better.
Chiseling
I am not
fond of this style. This basically means pushing with the chopper
until the chopper either misses, pops up an easy one, or gets
impatient and attacks too much. At the higher levels, chiseling is
rare, but at the lower and medium levels, it is more common. Since
I’m a strong believer that the game has to be FUN (it is a game!), I
don’t like this way of winning. Unless you’re a chopper yourself (in
which case SOMEONE’s got to push, and it might as well be you), I’d
rather see a player lose by attacking in some way. You may lose now,
but you’ll learn how to play a chopper better in future matches.
Courtesy of Larry Hodges
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