Hewitt d. Sampras 7-6 (4), 6-1, 6-1
Sampras had held serve 87 consecutive times until he was broken in the first game of the final.
(Two months earlier at Wimbledon he had finished up a record streak of 118 consecutive holds, extending back to the 2000 Wimbledon).
To get to the final, he’d beaten three U.S. Open champions (Rafter, Agassi and Safin), a first.
Hewitt was 20, Sampras 30.
Sampras had won at least one Slam for 8 straight years (tied with Borg).
Boxscore from the New York Daily News:
HEWITT SAMPRAS
1st Serve percentage 64 60
Aces 7 11
Double Faults 5 6
Unforced Errors 13 38
1st Serve Winning Pct. 84 63
2nd Serve Winning Pct. 50 43
Winners (inc. service) 36 35
Break Points 6-13 1-2
Net Points 8-8 49-98
Total Points Won 100 76
Time of Match 1:54
No disagreements with the ATP stats.
My stats also agree with the ATP:
Hewitt won 100 points overall, Sampras 76.
SERVICE
Hewitt won 55 of 77 points on serve, Sampras 54 of 99.
Hewitt served at 64%, making 49 of 77 first serves.
Sampras served at 60%, making 59 of 99 first serves.
Hewitt’s first-serve percentages by set:
26/38 (68%)
13/19 (68%)
10/20 (50%)
Sampras’ first-serve percentages by set:
24/39 (62%)
21/34 (62%)
14/26 (54%)
Hewitt got his first serve into play on 1 of 2 break points, Sampras on 7 of 13.
Hewitt served 7 aces, 5 doubles.
Sampras served 11 aces, 6 doubles.
Hewitt got 18 return errors from Sampras, of which I judged 3 as service winners.
Sampras got 22 return errors from Hewitt, of which I judged 6 as service winners.
WINNERS
Hewitt had 26 clean winners: 9 FH, 15 BH, 2 FH.
Sampras had 19 clean winners: 3 FH, 2 BH, 2 FHV, 8 BHV, 4 overheads.
Hewitt's winners by set: 6, 10, 10
Sampras' winners by set: 9, 5, 5
Hewitt made 7 return winners (including 6 BH’s). All of them were passes, and he had 15 other passes (including 9 BH's).
Sampras made one FH return winner. He had no pass winners of any kind.
ERRORS
Subtracting the winners and aces from the total points won to get the errors (forced and unforced):
Hewitt made 46 errors. Of those I counted 22 return errors and 5 double-faults.
Sampras made 67 errors. Of those I counted 18 return errors and 6 double-faults.
So in all the exchanges that had at least a successful return of serve, Hewitt made 19 errors, Sampras 43.
Sampras had held serve 87 consecutive times until he was broken in the first game of the final.
(Two months earlier at Wimbledon he had finished up a record streak of 118 consecutive holds, extending back to the 2000 Wimbledon).
To get to the final, he’d beaten three U.S. Open champions (Rafter, Agassi and Safin), a first.
Hewitt was 20, Sampras 30.
Sampras had won at least one Slam for 8 straight years (tied with Borg).
Boxscore from the New York Daily News:
HEWITT SAMPRAS
1st Serve percentage 64 60
Aces 7 11
Double Faults 5 6
Unforced Errors 13 38
1st Serve Winning Pct. 84 63
2nd Serve Winning Pct. 50 43
Winners (inc. service) 36 35
Break Points 6-13 1-2
Net Points 8-8 49-98
Total Points Won 100 76
Time of Match 1:54
No disagreements with the ATP stats.
My stats also agree with the ATP:
Hewitt won 100 points overall, Sampras 76.
SERVICE
Hewitt won 55 of 77 points on serve, Sampras 54 of 99.
Hewitt served at 64%, making 49 of 77 first serves.
Sampras served at 60%, making 59 of 99 first serves.
Hewitt’s first-serve percentages by set:
26/38 (68%)
13/19 (68%)
10/20 (50%)
Sampras’ first-serve percentages by set:
24/39 (62%)
21/34 (62%)
14/26 (54%)
Hewitt got his first serve into play on 1 of 2 break points, Sampras on 7 of 13.
Hewitt served 7 aces, 5 doubles.
Sampras served 11 aces, 6 doubles.
Hewitt got 18 return errors from Sampras, of which I judged 3 as service winners.
Sampras got 22 return errors from Hewitt, of which I judged 6 as service winners.
WINNERS
Hewitt had 26 clean winners: 9 FH, 15 BH, 2 FH.
Sampras had 19 clean winners: 3 FH, 2 BH, 2 FHV, 8 BHV, 4 overheads.
Hewitt's winners by set: 6, 10, 10
Sampras' winners by set: 9, 5, 5
Hewitt made 7 return winners (including 6 BH’s). All of them were passes, and he had 15 other passes (including 9 BH's).
Sampras made one FH return winner. He had no pass winners of any kind.
ERRORS
Subtracting the winners and aces from the total points won to get the errors (forced and unforced):
Hewitt made 46 errors. Of those I counted 22 return errors and 5 double-faults.
Sampras made 67 errors. Of those I counted 18 return errors and 6 double-faults.
So in all the exchanges that had at least a successful return of serve, Hewitt made 19 errors, Sampras 43.