schmke
Legend
The tie-breakers the USTA uses for standings in TennisLink, and thus used at Nationals, involve breaking ties between teams ultimately on sets lost and games lost. It has been this way for years.
This is fundamentally broken as it ignores sets won and games won, and when at Nationals teams may not even play each other and have the ability to hang lost sets/games on the other team, it is especially egregious.
Unfortunately these flawed tie-breakers have kicked in numerous times before (https://tt.tennis-warehouse.com/ind...e-breakers-at-nationals.628794/#post-12786020) and they happened again this weekend.
The 55+ 8.0 women had two 4-0 teams and then four 3-1 teams as follows:
MS - 3-1 / 9-3 / 19-7
NE - 3-1 / 8-4 / 17-9
SO - 3-1 / 8-4 / 19-9
MA - 3-1 / 7-5 / 15-11
I've listed the teams in the order shown on TennisLink but why is New England ahead of Southern? Middle States has a better court record than the others so they get the 3rd spot, and Mid-Atlantic has the worst court record so they get 6th, but 4th and 5th are confusing.
The issue is that the USTA's tie-breakers only look at sets lost, not sets won. So NE and SO are tied and it goes to games lost where NE had lost fewer. But shouldn't sets won have been considered where SO won two more than NE?
The USTA says no, which is effectively telling SO, who was able to extend courts they lost to 3rd set TBs and thus won additional sets, that doing so did nothing for them.
The reason this is important at Nationals is that teams very well may not play each other, so you need the criteria used to break ties to be as equitable as possible. If one team happens to play a tougher schedule and lose a team match because of that, they shouldn't also be penalized by a flawed tie-breaker like this when being compared with a team with a weaker schedule. The fact that the team with the stronger schedule was able to extend matches and win extra sets should be considered.
In this case, Southern's loss was to Florida, who was 4-0 / 10-2 and the top seed. Southern gave them one of their court losses and so losing to Florida was certainly a "quality loss". Who did New England lose to? 1-3 Hawaii. That is not a quality loss.
Also, Southern beat Hawaii 2-1 who New England lost to, and Southern beat MOValley 3-0 while New England only beat them 2-1. So by any common opponent measure, Southern would be ahead too.
Southern's opponents had a record of 6-10 while New England's were 4-12. Neither exactly tough schedules, but Southern's noticeably tougher.
So, IMHO, the USTA got it wrong and it is so easy to fix. Come on USTA, get it right!
This is fundamentally broken as it ignores sets won and games won, and when at Nationals teams may not even play each other and have the ability to hang lost sets/games on the other team, it is especially egregious.
Unfortunately these flawed tie-breakers have kicked in numerous times before (https://tt.tennis-warehouse.com/ind...e-breakers-at-nationals.628794/#post-12786020) and they happened again this weekend.
The 55+ 8.0 women had two 4-0 teams and then four 3-1 teams as follows:
MS - 3-1 / 9-3 / 19-7
NE - 3-1 / 8-4 / 17-9
SO - 3-1 / 8-4 / 19-9
MA - 3-1 / 7-5 / 15-11
I've listed the teams in the order shown on TennisLink but why is New England ahead of Southern? Middle States has a better court record than the others so they get the 3rd spot, and Mid-Atlantic has the worst court record so they get 6th, but 4th and 5th are confusing.
The issue is that the USTA's tie-breakers only look at sets lost, not sets won. So NE and SO are tied and it goes to games lost where NE had lost fewer. But shouldn't sets won have been considered where SO won two more than NE?
The USTA says no, which is effectively telling SO, who was able to extend courts they lost to 3rd set TBs and thus won additional sets, that doing so did nothing for them.
The reason this is important at Nationals is that teams very well may not play each other, so you need the criteria used to break ties to be as equitable as possible. If one team happens to play a tougher schedule and lose a team match because of that, they shouldn't also be penalized by a flawed tie-breaker like this when being compared with a team with a weaker schedule. The fact that the team with the stronger schedule was able to extend matches and win extra sets should be considered.
In this case, Southern's loss was to Florida, who was 4-0 / 10-2 and the top seed. Southern gave them one of their court losses and so losing to Florida was certainly a "quality loss". Who did New England lose to? 1-3 Hawaii. That is not a quality loss.
Also, Southern beat Hawaii 2-1 who New England lost to, and Southern beat MOValley 3-0 while New England only beat them 2-1. So by any common opponent measure, Southern would be ahead too.
Southern's opponents had a record of 6-10 while New England's were 4-12. Neither exactly tough schedules, but Southern's noticeably tougher.
So, IMHO, the USTA got it wrong and it is so easy to fix. Come on USTA, get it right!