So what you are saying is that she's somehow more athletic because she's doing it with a handicap (that doesn't even impact her play)? Did she start out playing with her right hand and lost it? Otherwise I don't really see the point.
Sure she's athletic and has great skill, but what does her handicap have to do with it?
table tennis is one of the most athletic sports that exists. jumping all around hitting balls at 90mph with thousands of rpm's of spin takes soccer-player legs, excellent hand-eye coordination and huge amounts of technical training. at least in tennis there's a few moments before the ball comes back at you. in table tennis it's almost instantaneous.
anyway, the off-arm is used very little in TT, so i agree with a commenter above- there is very little point or message in this posting. btw, my opinion comes from being a long-time club and tournament-level player.
Just to troll: Having both my hands I am able to do oh so much more than play Ping Pong all day, so I leave that to those that have nothing better to do. ;-)
So what you are saying is that she's somehow more athletic because she's doing it with a handicap (that doesn't even impact her play)? Did she start out playing with her right hand and lost it? Otherwise I don't really see the point.
Sure she's athletic and has great skill, but what does her handicap have to do with it?
table tennis is one of the most athletic sports that exists. jumping all around hitting balls at 90mph with thousands of rpm's of spin takes soccer-player legs, excellent hand-eye coordination and huge amounts of technical training. at least in tennis there's a few moments before the ball comes back at you. in table tennis it's almost instantaneous.
anyway, the off-arm is used very little in TT, so i agree with a commenter above- there is very little point or message in this posting. btw, my opinion comes from being a long-time club and tournament-level player.
Just to troll: Having both my hands I am able to do oh so much more than play Ping Pong all day, so I leave that to those that have nothing better to do. ;-)
What's the poster's excuse?
Sure she's athletic and has great skill, but what does her handicap have to do with it?
anyway, the off-arm is used very little in TT, so i agree with a commenter above- there is very little point or message in this posting. btw, my opinion comes from being a long-time club and tournament-level player.