First round and we've already seen the abject failure of tennis to simply enforce rules has a negative impact on matches.
Laura Siegelman, in first round vs Coco Gauff did everything she could to disrupt play. As Brad Gilbert posted online, she didn't even toss the ball until 15 seconds after the shot clock had passed 25 -- and the delays continued returning serve. Got Laura a first set she probably couldn't win otherwise. Delaying & disrupting matches has also played a key role in several of Djokovic's biggest victories.
Simon Biggs in Telegraph quotes Tim Henman extensively:
> At last year’s US Open, men’s matches averaged 176 minutes – comfortably the highest figure on record. Alarmingly, that number has grown by 26 minutes since the 2017 US Open, which was the final year before the tournament introduced a visible shot-clock.
As Henman told Telegraph Sport last week, “The rule says that you have 25 seconds, but that’s not the way it’s being implemented. When I was down on court for the United Cup, the umpires weren’t starting the shot-clock countdown until eight, nine or even 10 seconds after the previous rally had finished.
“If you add it up, that’s an extra minute for the average game, an extra 10 minutes for the average set, and almost an hour in a five-setter. You’re seeing three-set matches like the Cincinatti final the other day – amazing though it was – and they’re running to almost four hours. And this at a time when most sports are trying to speed up.”
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Laura Siegelman, in first round vs Coco Gauff did everything she could to disrupt play. As Brad Gilbert posted online, she didn't even toss the ball until 15 seconds after the shot clock had passed 25 -- and the delays continued returning serve. Got Laura a first set she probably couldn't win otherwise. Delaying & disrupting matches has also played a key role in several of Djokovic's biggest victories.
Simon Biggs in Telegraph quotes Tim Henman extensively:
> At last year’s US Open, men’s matches averaged 176 minutes – comfortably the highest figure on record. Alarmingly, that number has grown by 26 minutes since the 2017 US Open, which was the final year before the tournament introduced a visible shot-clock.
As Henman told Telegraph Sport last week, “The rule says that you have 25 seconds, but that’s not the way it’s being implemented. When I was down on court for the United Cup, the umpires weren’t starting the shot-clock countdown until eight, nine or even 10 seconds after the previous rally had finished.
“If you add it up, that’s an extra minute for the average game, an extra 10 minutes for the average set, and almost an hour in a five-setter. You’re seeing three-set matches like the Cincinatti final the other day – amazing though it was – and they’re running to almost four hours. And this at a time when most sports are trying to speed up.”
Free access via Yahoo
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