Jinxin had been mixing his down the line loops with his inside out forehands from his backhand side all match long. That variety won him the final points since Andrew was hesitant as to which way Jinxin was going. Andrew obviously trains a lot on counter looping on his forehand side and is 2500 level with that speed and technique. I think the long backspin serve would have put pressure on Jinxin rather than the short and half-long serves at the end. Even if Jinxin would have backhand looped the long serve, Andrew has the counter to that in his arsenal. Well done by both great players. Great coaching by Dubina to reinforce the trusting of his shots so there’s no hesitation in the strokes.
It was a great match, the former US Open Champ found a way to win against a great player. I noticed at the end, Jinxin kept his chops short and basically waited for Andrew to chop long, as a result, Jinxin won the match.
@@RedArrow2007 they are not a 1200 player...it does not matter who open first...open without killing quality just means "ok we will play top-spin"... from 10:5 to 10:9, just focus on the wrist movement on Jingxing wang...you will tell...he slows down and add spin there
@@yzg8116 Yes it does, in this match it did, Jinxin wasn't the one chopping deep at the end, he kept it short, and Andrew became predictable with his long chops. Most players know who play on a regular basis that 80 percent or more, people aim toward the backhand first. This is not a top-secret tactic for world-class players or 1200 players. Tactics are involved with opening up, you don't need to be 2600 to do that! The tactic of Jinxin at the end was to play short and have Andrew chop deep. As far as the rest of the match, you could see Jinxin having problems with speed, he hit into the net or misjudge the spin and hit it over the table like when Andrew got his 10th point in the 5th game, 10-5, the score was. Jinxin mixed up his serves a couple wide to Andrew's forehand and then a fast serve deep to his backhand. Andrew had his best chance of winning when it was 10-6, he got a weak return as Jinxin was expecting something short in the middle and he got another weak shot from Jinxin but still lost the point. Maybe nervous, he didn't have that same aggression he had earlier in the match with that point. For a kid who is almost 2400 and Jinixin being over 2600 and almost won was quite remarkable.
Jinxin had been mixing his down the line loops with his inside out forehands from his backhand side all match long. That variety won him the final points since Andrew was hesitant as to which way Jinxin was going. Andrew obviously trains a lot on counter looping on his forehand side and is 2500 level with that speed and technique. I think the long backspin serve would have put pressure on Jinxin rather than the short and half-long serves at the end. Even if Jinxin would have backhand looped the long serve, Andrew has the counter to that in his arsenal. Well done by both great players. Great coaching by Dubina to reinforce the trusting of his shots so there’s no hesitation in the strokes.
It was a great match, the former US Open Champ found a way to win against a great player. I noticed at the end, Jinxin kept his chops short and basically waited for Andrew to chop long, as a result, Jinxin won the match.
speed vs spin...if you see at the end, wang just step back and use long spin loop instead of powerful speed shot to come back. this is a great match
@@yzg8116 you missed the point. It was about who opened first. You can't step back and spin the ball if you don't chop deep.
@@RedArrow2007 they are not a 1200 player...it does not matter who open first...open without killing quality just means "ok we will play top-spin"... from 10:5 to 10:9, just focus on the wrist movement on Jingxing wang...you will tell...he slows down and add spin there
@@yzg8116 Yes it does, in this match it did, Jinxin wasn't the one chopping deep at the end, he kept it short, and Andrew became predictable with his long chops. Most players know who play on a regular basis that 80 percent or more, people aim toward the backhand first. This is not a top-secret tactic for world-class players or 1200 players. Tactics are involved with opening up, you don't need to be 2600 to do that! The tactic of Jinxin at the end was to play short and have Andrew chop deep. As far as the rest of the match, you could see Jinxin having problems with speed, he hit into the net or misjudge the spin and hit it over the table like when Andrew got his 10th point in the 5th game, 10-5, the score was. Jinxin mixed up his serves a couple wide to Andrew's forehand and then a fast serve deep to his backhand. Andrew had his best chance of winning when it was 10-6, he got a weak return as Jinxin was expecting something short in the middle and he got another weak shot from Jinxin but still lost the point. Maybe nervous, he didn't have that same aggression he had earlier in the match with that point. For a kid who is almost 2400 and Jinixin being over 2600 and almost won was quite remarkable.