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#41 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 7,148
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#42 |
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Professional
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 1,383
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I don't know what statistics say, but I wouldn't be surprised if service-related statistics favour Roddick.
Why? Because players with absolutely great serves there have been dozens in every decade, and most of them never even reach a GS final. And all these players with great serves (Forget, Wheaton, Stich, Krajicek, Ivanisevic, Rosset, Larsson, Arthurs, Johansson, Philippoussis, Isner, Karlovic...), they may have some (or many) service-related statistics with better numbers than those of Sampras or Roddick. I would not be surprise if that were the case. Why? Because you don't win many GS tournaments and be nº1 in the world for years because of a great serve (as I said, most of the great servers of each era don't won GS tournaments, don't even reached GS finals most of them, even if they win almost as much service-games as Roddick or Sampras). It is the whole package that is important, and it shows most in the return-games. It is possible that Sampras won many more return-games than the rest of those great serve players (even though Sampras usually never tried hard for a second break of serve if he was already up a break). |
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#43 | |||
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Professional
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 868
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Now I don't think the latter played as big a role as the first two, at least not as far as the '90s are concerned. For example in the past you could hear even a top-notch server like Gonzales dismissing flat serves as "for show-offs," which displays a mindset foreign to more recent players who, of course, try to win points outright on their serves. Part of that mentality was due to the prevalence of S&V. That is, if you were coming to the net it was generally better to take a few mph off and get higher %s of 1st serves in, which resulted in fewer freebies. In fact the difference is stark when you compare the %s of free points on serve between the eras: before the '90s the average %s of unreturned serves rarely broke the 40% mark, even for big servers like Tanner and Becker, whereas now 40% is relatively common and even 50% isn't entirely unheard of. And of course there's the matter of technology. Again it's s a myth that the modern racquets boost your maximum serve speeds significantly, but they do allow you to impart more spin, which helps increase your 1st-serve %s and thus your average serve speeds. And your speeds get an additional boost because the extra spin allows for bigger 2nd serves, too, and again since players are not following their serves to the net anymore and it's not as important to ease on the pace and get more 1st serves in. People usually ignore this serve part of the equation when they talk about how the new racquets have aided the return. As you can see all these factors are related to each other, and it's hard to say which one contributed most to the steady increases in service stats. In any case people should've realized by now that all the chatter about surfaces slowing down or the supposedly improved return, spin and/or athleticism making S&V/all-court tennis obsolete is ultimately irrelevant, for the following reasons: 1) We know, contrary to popular belief, that players today are holding serve with more ease than perhaps ever. 2) We know, again contrary to popular belief, that the racquet/technology/spin/fill-in-the-blank revolution didn't drive S&Vers out of the game, since they were already becoming extinct in the '90s, well before the so-called revolution took root. 3) There are more than enough examples of players, some from the '90s, enjoying success thanks to S&V in the '00s and beyond, which belies the boilerplate talk that it is no longer a viable strategy today. And really, people have no more excuse for remaining in the dark about all this, especially since they often happen to be the same ones who engage in all kinds of statistical contortions to prove their case and they could easily look up the above stats with just a couple clicks. Quote:
BTW do you have the 1st- and 2nd-serve stats (including unreturned serves) for all of Pete's Wimby finals? I've been meaning to compare and perhaps start a thread on Pete's & Fed's Wimby title runs (along with another one on unreturned serves in general--lots of work involved there), and so far I have every one of Pete's except those for the 1997 and '98 finals. I do have roughly accurate numbers for the '97 because I once watched the whole thing and wrote down whatever match stats I could think of (I'll definitely do a thread on this match once I verify everything), for the '98 final I have nothing but the 1st-serve stats. I know you have lots of other obscure stats at hand that I'd be interested in, so let me know if you want to exchange private messages instead of posting everything here and possibly hijacking the thread. As my contributions of sorts I have Fed winning 75.6% of his 1st-serve points (68/90) and 48.8% on 2nd (20/41) in last year's Wimby final, and winning 19/21 service games in the final and 92.44% (110/119) for the whole tournament (4/20 and 33.33% or 38/114 of return games respectively). Those numbers should not be easy to come by, if you don't have them already. Quote:
See above for a detailed explanation of how the improved service stats came about. Sure it is. |
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#44 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 135
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hijacking the thread? with the number of trolls in this forum, nobody will notice so, service stats for pete, wimby 97 and 98? here 1997 1st serve 45/76, 59% 1st serve pts won 39/45, 87% 2nd serve pts won 21/31, 68% unreturned serves 45/76, 59% 1998 1st serve 85/155, 55% 1st serve pts won 69/85, 81% 2nd serve pts won 44/70, 63% unreturned serves 71/155, 46% |
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| slice serve ace |
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#45 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 7,502
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And they don't track Davis Cup, which has been the site of some rather high ace counts(Guga's 47 ace match etc) or Grand Slam Cup(some 40+ ace matches for Goran there) |
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| Moose Malloy |
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#46 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Birmingham, AL U.S.A.
Posts: 468
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Quote:
The stats that are most important for assessing the serve as a stroke are - Aces - Winners - 1st serve % - Double faults
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blogging on the web at Plastic Surgery 101 http://plasticsurgery101.blogspot.com/ |
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#47 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 135
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indirect, yes. the total % of unreturned serves would be the closest to direct measurment of the stroke itself (aces are only subsection of that stat)
my intention with stats that i posted is to show that pete's service game held much better when the going gets tough. sure, everybody knows that his game outside of the serve is much better than roddick's, but i also think that unpredictabillity and better placement of pete's serve is more usefull against better opposition than predictable roddick's 140 mph bomb down the T |
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| slice serve ace |
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#48 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 2,651
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Sampras had this ability to pull out huge first and second serves at critical times. Roddick would win service games easily during the first few games of the set but towards the end when he really needed some first serves and easy games, he couldn't do it(esp. against top players).
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The truth isn't mean. It's the truth. Andrew Breitbart. |
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| Bhagi Katbamna |
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#49 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: USA
Posts: 185
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roddick for sure. could hit it 10-20 mph harder, clutch city and had a huuuuuge kick serve. no question.
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If you don't practice, you don't deserve to dream |
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#50 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 3,263
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either that, or we could just analyze stats without adding caveats to it when it doesn't suit our view points (e.g. explaining away consistency of current top seeds to a 32-seed system, or homogeneity in surfaces or bemoaning lack of surface "specialists")? |
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#51 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 135
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Quote:
ok let's reconsider if bolded stands, sampras should play lower ranked oponents more often at QF to F stage than roddick since they come from the different seeding sistem, let's compare them in 2 categories; how much they played players ranked 1-16 and 1-32 australian open roddick has 10 matches from qf-f sampras has 14 matches from qf-f vs players ranked 1-16 roddick played 5 of 10 matches, 50% sampras played 10 of 14 matches, 71% vs players ranked 1-32 roddick played 7 of 10 matches, 70% sampras played 12 of 14 matches, 83% wimbledon roddick has 12 matches from qf-f sampras has 24 matches from qf-f vs players ranked 1-16 roddick played 6 of 12 matches, 50% sampras played 14 of 24 matches, 58% vs players ranked 1-32 roddick played 9 of 12 matches, 75% sampras played 19 of 24 matches, 79% us open roddick has 12 matches from qf-f sampras has 27 matches from qf-f vs players ranked 1-16 roddick played 8 of 12 matches, 67% sampras played 21 of 27matches, 78% vs players ranked 1-32 roddick played 11 of 12 matches, 92% sampras played 26 of 27 matches, 96% so sampras leads in every single category at every slam. looks like bolded doesn't stand in this comparation. sampras didn't benefit from lower ranked oponents - in fact he played tougher oposition more often, if we go by ranking, no matter if it's 1-16 or 1-32. so i stand by what i said before; sampras service game is in different class from roddick's from QF to F. is it because of sampras' superior backup game or the serve itself, that is arguable. Last edited by slice serve ace : 02-21-2013 at 08:29 AM. |
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