For several years now, some have argued that it made sense for some players to hit first serves on their seconds.
The math is simple: What's your first serve in rate and win rate. Multiply and if it is better than what you're getting on a second go for it. If not, don't.
One argument against that is the psychological pressure of hitting a second. To paraphrase the EPA, your heart rate may vary.
Another argument for, is that hitting big all the time keeps a grinder from getting a rhythm.
Now, with Nick Kyrgios, Sasha Zverev and this Sunday with Daniil Medvedev winning a major, and ending Djokovic's Grand Slam run by doing just that -- going for firsts as seconds, is it a legit strategy for more to consider?
Nick is a unique case (in so many ways ). When he beat Djokovic twice in a row, he varied from hitting slow seconds on his first serve, with bombs on his second. It drove Novak into a screaming frenzy <g>. Sasha is covering a weakness.
But, Daniil is a legit, reliable server so his reliance on firsts-as-seconds could change the discussion.
Double faults used to be considered a near-sin.
Has "whatever you do, get your second serve in, don't give your opponent a free point" been replaced with "Go big on second to win points"?
Medvedev hit 9 double faults in only 3 sets yet won 58% of his second serves against an opponent many call the greatest returner of all time.
Overall, Djokovic won only 29% of his receiving points. That's staggeringly bad.
Daniil hit one second serve at 126 MPH, which was faster than any of Novak's first serves.
In fairness, he didn't go big all the time. He mixed it up. Also, several of what I'd call firsts-on-seconds were heavy slice serves wide to exploit Novak deep return position. One might call some of those 1.5 serves.
Does this make sense? Should serious players start practicing hitting firsts-as-seconds? What would that entail?
filedata/fetch?id=95401&d=1631642744&type=thumb
The math is simple: What's your first serve in rate and win rate. Multiply and if it is better than what you're getting on a second go for it. If not, don't.
One argument against that is the psychological pressure of hitting a second. To paraphrase the EPA, your heart rate may vary.
Another argument for, is that hitting big all the time keeps a grinder from getting a rhythm.
Now, with Nick Kyrgios, Sasha Zverev and this Sunday with Daniil Medvedev winning a major, and ending Djokovic's Grand Slam run by doing just that -- going for firsts as seconds, is it a legit strategy for more to consider?
Nick is a unique case (in so many ways ). When he beat Djokovic twice in a row, he varied from hitting slow seconds on his first serve, with bombs on his second. It drove Novak into a screaming frenzy <g>. Sasha is covering a weakness.
But, Daniil is a legit, reliable server so his reliance on firsts-as-seconds could change the discussion.
Double faults used to be considered a near-sin.
Has "whatever you do, get your second serve in, don't give your opponent a free point" been replaced with "Go big on second to win points"?
Medvedev hit 9 double faults in only 3 sets yet won 58% of his second serves against an opponent many call the greatest returner of all time.
Overall, Djokovic won only 29% of his receiving points. That's staggeringly bad.
Daniil hit one second serve at 126 MPH, which was faster than any of Novak's first serves.
In fairness, he didn't go big all the time. He mixed it up. Also, several of what I'd call firsts-on-seconds were heavy slice serves wide to exploit Novak deep return position. One might call some of those 1.5 serves.
Does this make sense? Should serious players start practicing hitting firsts-as-seconds? What would that entail?
filedata/fetch?id=95401&d=1631642744&type=thumb
Comment