Originally posted by johnyandell
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I'd be surprised if any inaccuracies in the HawkEye data were great enough to alter the basic trends they show.
Let's say the high end measurements are off by 4%, which would be a huge error. Then the top groundstroke speeds of 130 MPH, if inaccurate by +/-4% would actually be 124 - 134 MPH.
So, the extremes, the highest speeds for groundstrokes would still be overlapping with service speeds. That's amazing & yet worth questioning.
The second trend the HawkEye data shows is that the highest groundstroke speeds for most of the top players has moved from several players reaching 100 MPH during a tournament 10 years ago, to most everyone in the top 20 not named Diego Schwartzman, hitting 120 mph on one or both sides from time to time. That, to me, is the bigger takeaway. So, again assume it's off by 4%, then that becomes the top 20 regularly reaching 115 - 125 MPH, not in every game, but over the course of a tournament. That's a big leap from peak Fedal years.
In order to change those two conclusions, the HawkEye errors would have to be, say, over 10% -- which would be so egregious, the reliability of the whole system would be called into question.
There's another interpretation to the USTA official's comment about inaccuracy. That would be that the system has trouble with so-called "Edge Cases". That is, the measurements are accurate most of the time, but have trouble with some difficult conditions. For example, when a player is at the back wall fewer cameras have coverage of the racket striking the ball. Going from bright sun to dark shadow with low contrast but cause problems. But even then, measurements of typical groundstrokes struck from the normal playing area should be accurate.
When I pulled data for the earlier TPN article, I removed data on shots that shows "Spin N/A", or unusual flight paths for the balls, to reduce possible issues like that.
I spent some time searching for information on accuracy of HawkEye used in Major League Baseball. Unlike tennis there are independent studies of HawkEyes accuracy there. Academics discuss the errors, but in fractions of a percent, nothing approaching what would fundamentally change what the groundstroke stats show us. One issue is "calibrating for stadiums". I don't know what they believe varies. But the tennis HawkEye data, paltry and erratically shared as it is, is consistent for players across different events. If Caspar Ruud hits 120MPH and often close to 4,000 RPMs, that is shown at different sites, with different sets of equipment.
Well, I failed in my goal of conciseness. Sorry <g>
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