Hi Folks,
Over the past couple of days I've been doing some basic number crunching of who in the ATP over the last couple of years gets into tie-breaks more often than others and who's better at winning and how those percentages compare to other basic serve and return statistics in an effort to find some non-trivial correlation among them and hopefully, in the end, being able to generate some general rules that will enable me to make informed predictions such as: given the history of players X and Y, in a tie-break Y should win the set. I'm still looking and haven't reached any conclusions yet, and even if I don't reach anything firm I'll still probably post the stats sometime later.
Meanwhile, has anyone else looked into this? Maybe I'm walking on ground already covered and I just haven't been able to find the tracks.
On a more practical note, anyone have good strategies for winning tie-breaks? Anyone have hard facts on how they are won? Person with fewest errors usually win? How about the man with the better serve? The dude with the highest aggressive margain is the tie-break top dog? Maybe it's the person with the better return game? Maybe the person who has won the most points up the tie-break usually wins? I've heard it said that the person who wins the first point usually wins the set. Is that true? Anyone ever looked at the stats?
How about the importance of getting your first serves in? Or maybe second serve points become magnified in importance during a tie-break. Is it better to turn up the aggression on your return game or to tone it down and bit and be sure to get the return back in play. Maybe the person who gets the most returns back in play usual wins the tie-break.
What's the better tie-break motto? Hold your serve and you'll never lose. Or Never break serve and you'll never win. Neither? Both? Another?
Who has the edge in a tie-break, the better server or the better returner?
So many questions, and many more still left.
Thanks for any help.
Over the past couple of days I've been doing some basic number crunching of who in the ATP over the last couple of years gets into tie-breaks more often than others and who's better at winning and how those percentages compare to other basic serve and return statistics in an effort to find some non-trivial correlation among them and hopefully, in the end, being able to generate some general rules that will enable me to make informed predictions such as: given the history of players X and Y, in a tie-break Y should win the set. I'm still looking and haven't reached any conclusions yet, and even if I don't reach anything firm I'll still probably post the stats sometime later.
Meanwhile, has anyone else looked into this? Maybe I'm walking on ground already covered and I just haven't been able to find the tracks.
On a more practical note, anyone have good strategies for winning tie-breaks? Anyone have hard facts on how they are won? Person with fewest errors usually win? How about the man with the better serve? The dude with the highest aggressive margain is the tie-break top dog? Maybe it's the person with the better return game? Maybe the person who has won the most points up the tie-break usually wins? I've heard it said that the person who wins the first point usually wins the set. Is that true? Anyone ever looked at the stats?
How about the importance of getting your first serves in? Or maybe second serve points become magnified in importance during a tie-break. Is it better to turn up the aggression on your return game or to tone it down and bit and be sure to get the return back in play. Maybe the person who gets the most returns back in play usual wins the tie-break.
What's the better tie-break motto? Hold your serve and you'll never lose. Or Never break serve and you'll never win. Neither? Both? Another?
Who has the edge in a tie-break, the better server or the better returner?
So many questions, and many more still left.
Thanks for any help.
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