Djokovic Breaks The Mould

  • Posted: Mar 29, 2016

Djokovic Breaks The Mould

Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers examines how the World No. 1 defies trends on return games

There is a golfing term that perfectly sums up the uneven relationship between the fairway and the green – “you drive for show, but you putt for dough”.

That phrase speaks volumes to understanding the importance of the deuce court and ad court in tennis, specifically relating to break points.

The deuce court is the fairway, always hosting the beginning of the game, and the ad court is the green, where the majority of the winning and losing in our sport takes place.

You would expect Top 25 players to perform better where most of the action occurs – in the ad court – but surprisingly, it’s just the opposite.

An Infosys ATP Beyond the Numbers analysis of the Top 25 in the Emirates ATP Rankings in the 2015 season, and also the first two months of this year, clearly shows that “putting for dough” in the ad court has some catching up to do.

More than three out of four (76.6 per cent) of all break points occurred in the ad court last year in this Top 25 analysis. The only break point opportunity in the deuce court in tennis occurs at 15-40, which equated to just 23.4 per cent of the time.

What’s puzzling is that the Top 25 in the world perform better converting break points in the deuce court than the ad court.

2015 Season

Deuce Court

Ad Court

Side of Court Break Point Played

23.4%

76.6%

Returner Win %

44.6%

40.8%

After two months of competition in the 2016 season, those same trends are all very close to the much bigger data set of the 11 months of the 2015 season.

2016 Jan/Feb

Deuce Court

Ad Court

Side of Court Break Point Played

23.8%

76.2%

Returner Win %

42.9%

40.6%

Hidden Djokovic Advantage

World No. 1 Novak Djokovic had a season for the ages in 2015. He went 82-6, winning 11 titles, including three Grand Slams, six ATP World Tour Masters 1000 tournaments and the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals. Djokovic also amassed more than $21 million in prize money.

Interestingly, Djokovic was one of only five players of the 2015 year-end Top 25 who had a superior winning percentage converting break points in the ad court than in the deuce.

Djokovic converted break points 46.6 per cent of the time in the ad court and 42.5 per cent of the time in the deuce court. The other players to be better in the ad court were David Ferrer, David Goffin, Fabio Fognini and Viktor Troicki.

A common thread to figure out why these five players are different needs to focus on the formidable backhand strength each of them possesses, and the increased amount of early action the backhand typically sees when points start in the ad court.

That’s not to say other Top 25 players don’t have remarkable backhands, as they clearly do, but these five have figured out a way to improve their personal ad court performance.

For a right-handed player to turn a backhand return into forehand, it seems easier to do it in the deuce court, where they run around to the middle of the court, rather than running off the court in the ad court.

Leaderboard

Player

Ad Ct Converting Break Points

1

David Ferrer

47.7%

2

Gilles Simon

46.8%

3

Novak Djokovic

46.6%

4

Andy Murray

45.4%

5

Tomas Berdych

45.2%

6

Roberto Bautista Agut

44.3%

7

Fabio Fognini

43.4%

8

Viktor Troicki

42.3%

9

Benoit Paire

42.9%

10

David Goffin

42.0%

Ad Court – Best at Converting Break Points

But flying in the face of that wisdom is Rafael Nadal, who converted break points 52.8 per cent in the deuce court, where he would have to run off the court to hit a forehand, and 40.8 per cent in the ad, where he would get to run to the middle of the court.

Practice Court

Another factor for consideration is the practice court.

At all levels of the game, the most common side to practice serve and return is the deuce court, where games naturally begin. Developing the angles and strategy in the ad court simply does not get the same amount of practice time as the deuce court does – even though more than three out of four of the “big” points happen in the ad.

Overview

The difference between good and great in our sport is very difficult to put your finger on and often times exists between the ears, or in the hidden flow of tactics all over court.

Decorated South African golfer, Bobby Locke, who won four golfing “Grand Slams” at the Open Championship, knew exactly the message he was sending with his famous “putt for dough” quote.

These break point numbers shed light on a critical element of our sport and open the door for more insight and discussion as to just how players make the leap from good to great to legend status in our sport.

Year End Ranking

Player

Deuce BP Win %

Deuce Broken

Total Deuce BP’s

Ad BP Win %

Ad Broken

Ad Total BP’s

1

Djokovic

42.5%

96

226

46.6%

327

701

2

Murray

48.0%

82

171

45.4%

258

568

3

Federer

44.3%

70

158

40.4%

207

512

4

Wawrinka

45.7%

64

140

37.4%

175

468

5

Nadal

52.8%

94

178

40.8%

236

578

6

Berdych

51.2%

66

129

45.2%

198

438

7

Ferrer

40.8%

62

152

47.7%

244

512

8

Nishikori

48.8%

62

127

38.4%

167

435

9

Gasquet

48.2%

55

114

40.8%

144

353

10

Tsonga

44.8%

43

96

37.1%

119

321

11

Isner

41.7%

35

84

33.2%

77

232

12

Anderson

39.2%

38

97

37.2%

125

336

13

Cilic

41.7%

35

84

39.5%

130

329

14

Raonic

35.1%

20

57

33.2%

63

190

15

Simon

53.1%

78

147

46.8%

196

419

16

Goffin

34.1%

45

132

42.0%

172

410

17

Lopez

36.5%

38

104

32.9%

104

316

18

Tomic

43.8%

49

112

40.7%

138

339

19

Paire

56.6%

43

76

42.9%

111

259

20

Thiem

39.0%

39

100

32.0%

130

406

21

Fognini

37.4%

37

99

43.4%

158

364

22

Troicki

32.3%

32

99

43.3%

156

360

23

Karlovic

39.1%

27

69

30.7%

71

231

24

Monfils

56.4%

53

94

35.9%

107

298

25

B. Agut

48.4%

61

126

44.3%

153

345

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