Why Federer & Co. Love Serving At 15-All

  • Posted: Sep 20, 2016

Why Federer & Co. Love Serving At 15-All

Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers shows how the top players take advantage of the ‘even’ scoreline

Don’t let the evenness of 15-15 fool you. It is a statistical green light for the server to play aggressively and employ first-strike tactics to get ahead in the game.

An Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers analysis of the current Top 10 players in the Emirates ATP Rankings reveals a positive environment for them to play bigger and seek shorter points by delivering more firepower at the start of the point.

Check Out The Game’s Best Servers In The ATP Stats LEADERBOARDS

Top 10 of the Emirates ATP Rankings: Holding Percentages

 Ranking  Player  Percentage At 15-15  Percentage At 30-15  Percentage At 15-30  Percentage Gap From 30-15 To 15-30
 1  Novak Djokovic  84  92  67  25
 2   Andy Murray  85  94  64  30
 3  Stan Wawrinka  83  91  68  23
 4  Rafael Nadal  80  92  60  32
 5  Kei Nishikori     80  91  62  29
 6  Milos Raonic  87  94  71  23
 7  Roger Federer  89  96  70  26
 8  Gael Monfils   82  93  57  36
 9  Tomas Berdych   86  93  64  29
 10  Dominic Thiem  80  92  59  33
 –  AVERAGE  84  93  64  29

Score 15-15, Hold Serve Percentage: 84
The Top 10 players in the Emirates ATP Rankings hold serve 85 per cent of the time, according to Infosys Information Platform. With the score at 15-15, their hold-serve percentage drops only one percentage point, to 84, nearly identical to the opening point of the game.

Fifteen-all delivers a high win percentage that mentally puts the server in the driver’s seat, letting him unleash a few potential tactics, including a bigger first serve down the centre of the court if he’s chasing an ace or a serve out wide in search of a forehand return error.

Score 30-15, Hold Serve Percentage: 93
With relatively little scoreboard pressure on the server at 15-15, the opportunity to stretch the lead to 30-15 is forefront in the tactical plan. If the server reaches 30-15, they will hold serve on average more than nine times out of 10. There is nothing not to like about that scoreboard situation.

Score 15-30, Hold Serve Percentage: 64
A server’s likelihood of holding shifts 29 percentage points when the scoreline changes from 30-15 to 15-30. There is always a statistical consequence of losing a point, but this really isn’t so bad. If the server loses the point at 15-15, he is still likely going to hold serve two out of three times. Proficient servers like Milos Raonic and Roger Federer still manage to hold about 70 per cent of the time from 15-30, while World No. 1 Novak Djokovic holds 67 per cent of the time.

Summary
At 15-15, the server is looking for a shorter point to fully maximise the effects of the first serve, not letting the returner prolong the point into a more even battle. A serve, aggressive serve +1 forehand and a finishing volley is about as good as it gets strategically at this specific point in a game.

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