December 8, 2025

Tip of the Week
Coaching Yourself, Part 2 of 5: In Practice.

North American Teams
I coached 83 matches in three days at the Teams (Fri-Sun, Nov. 28-30 at the National Harbor in Maryland). It was my 50th Teams in a row (excluding the cancelled 2020 due to Covid), starting in 1976 when Gerald Ford was president. I used to play in it, but now I only coach. However, coaching can get pretty physical – as noted in my (short) blog last week, I somehow hurt my neck from all the watching, cheering, and coaching. (It’s 90% better now.) My voice got rather hoarse, my arm was hurting from three days of clapping, and I could barely hold my head up.

December 1, 2025

Tip of the Week
Coaching Yourself, Part 1 of 5: At Home.

Alas, after coaching 83 matches in three days at the North American Teams, I’ve somehow injured my neck – probably from yelling and cheering for our players. It started bothering me late on Day 2 (Saturday), and got progressively worse on Sunday to the point where I could barely hold my head up straight while coaching. I have the same problem trying to type on my computer. So, no blog this week – I’m probably going to spend the next few days in bed reading with my head propped up on a pillow. (But the Tip is up – I wrote it in advance.) I might have to get a neck brace – not sure yet. There’s a specific spot on it that’s injured, but I’m not sure if it’s muscle, tendon, or what. I’m not even sure if I can drive safely right now. (For the record, rounding to nearest half hour, I coached 23 matches on Friday from 8AM to 8PM; 32 matches on Saturday from 8AM to 11:30PM; and 28 matches on Sunday from 9AM to 9:30PM. That’s 83 matches in approximately 40 hours.)

November 24, 2025

Tips of the Week

Amity Team Cup in Nanjing, China
I returned last week from nine days in China where I played on the US Over 60 team in the Amity Team Cup in Nanjing. We came in fourth place! Alas, my flight to China was a disaster - see below. But I flew in to Shanghai, spent a day there, and then we had a bus to take us to Nanjing four the tournament on Nov. 14-15.

November 3, 2025

NEXT BLOG – Monday, Nov. 24
I’ll be out of town the next few weeks with trips to LA and Nanjing, China. See “Traveling” segment below. But the Tips of the Week will still go up each Monday. 

Tip of the Week
Learn to Defend on Receive.

Weekend Coaching
Some of you may have heard about the 6-7 thing that’s the latest craze among kids. In honor of that, in the three junior group sessions over the weekend I challenged players to get 67 shots in a row and called it out when they did. In multiball, I always yell, “Ten more seconds” near the end of each player’s turn (usually 70 sec to 2 min), but this time it was always, “Six or seven more seconds!” And I managed to find every possible way to work it in.

October 27, 2025

Tip of the Week
Death of the Kill.

Weekend Coaching
In one of our weekend junior group sessions, we had two new junior players, about 9 and 11 years old. It was their first time to a table tennis club. Two things stood out from them. First, they both had surprisingly good strokes, both forehand and backhand, and they moved well. (I think one of them said their father had coached them, and they’d seen videos.) But the problem was they both were using what were essentially store-bought toy sponge rackets. The rackets and sponge were dead, making it difficult to do advanced shots, especially in a fast rally. The older one borrowed someone else’s racket and did well with it. The other stayed with his slow one, for now. He did pretty well in drills but not in games at the end of the session. I’m pretty sure he’ll be switching to a better sponge soon.

September 29, 2025

Tip of the Week
Deliberate Practice in Table Tennis.

Sick, Next Blog Oct. 13, and Huntsman World Senior Championships
I think I have the flu – not sure yet. So, I got a very late start on today’s blog, which will be shorter than usual. I’ll be out of town next week at the Huntsman World Senior Championships in St. George, Utah. So next blog will be on Monday, Oct. 13. Wish me luck – I’m in Over 65 Men’s Singles and Doubles (with Mark Kraut), Over 55 Mixed Doubles (with Jia Guo) Over 65 Hardbat Men’s Singles, Hardbat Doubles (with Mark Kraut), and Elite Singles. Wish me luck!

Weekend Coaching
I had a busy coaching weekend. We did a lot of backhand footwork practice, an often overlooked technique. Many players just reach or even rotate their body in an awkward way rather than move. I also introduced “Neuromuscular Adaptation” drills to some of the kids. This is where you feed multiball, but they don’t know where I’m putting the ball. For beginning-intermediate players, you normally just put the ball to the middle forehand or middle backhand, and they have to react. For more advanced players you both go wider and you also go at their middle. The three keys are:

  1. Proper ready position, with racket pointed at where my racket would hit the ball, so the player can move in both directions equally well.
  2. React, don’t guess – don’t move until you see where the ball is going, and always remember that you have more time than you think. First move HAS to be the right direction.
  3.  Move to the ball, no reaching.

Remembering Charles “Chuck” Hoey
Here’s the obit for this US Table Tennis Hall of Famer, by Sean O’Neill.

September 22, 2025

Tip of the Week
Reverse Adverse Results With Reverse Serves.

Weekend Coaching and Capclave Table Tennis
Due to being a panelist for the Capclave Science Fiction Convention (half an hour away in Rockville, MD), I only coached one junior group session this weekend, on Saturday morning. I had a rotating group of four to work with. I did both multiball and live practice with one player, one did ball pickup, and the other two practiced on an adjacent table, with the players rotating both in the group, and with other groups. There was a big focus on footwork, but of course in every session the focus on footwork is either big, Big, or BIG. Two players had a tendency let their non-playing arms just hang there like a dead snake, which can lead to poor balance. So, whenever they did that, I yelled out, “Dead snake!”, and they knew what to do.

I’ve been a panelist for many years at the Capclave Science Fiction Convention, but this year, for me, it might as well have been the Capclave Table Tennis Convention. It seems everyone in the SF world knows about my TT world. I was questioned about it a lot between panels. Two people at the convention had relatives that were current or past USATT members. (One bought one of my table tennis books as a gift for them.) Several times I demonstrated my ping-pong ball-blowing trick. (Link should take you to 38:45 of this interview I did in 2020.) Several authors and fans mentioned they have tables in their houses. I also discussed with some the idea of a table tennis demonstration/exhibition at the 2026 World Science Fiction Convention in Anaheim, CA, Aug. 27-31. (For perspective, the last World SF Convention, last month in Seattle, had over 8,000 attendees.) 

September 15, 2025

Tip of the Week
Chopping and Playing Choppers – It’s All About the Mindset.

Weekend Coaching
“Keep your left arm up for balance!” I think I said that twenty times this past weekend, mostly to three players, all righties. It seems like every week there’s a different mantra, and that was this week’s. It’s so easy to let the arm just hang there when you aren’t moving too much, and then it becomes a bad habit and the player doesn’t even know how much they are off balance because of it. If you are 1% off balance in table tennis, you might as well be playing in a chair.

I worked with a group of kids on their fast, deep serves, using various targets on the table. For this, you should generally have three, sometimes four targets at the very end of the table. One on each wide corner, of course, but also one where a righty player’s elbow would normally be, a prime target for a fast serve or any other aggressive shot. You can also have a fourth target where a lefty’s playing elbow would be.