Saturday, July 14, 2007

Wimbledon Final 2007 - Part 2 -Should Nadal Serve Wide More In The Deuce Court?

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If you closely watch Rafael Nadal's serving patterns, you'll notice that he rarely goes wide in the deuce court.

I've charted Nadal's serving patterns for most of the last 2 French finals and the last 2 Wimbledon finals.

As I've noted before Nadal often basically lets you know where's he's going to serve. His reasoning must be that his slice serve is good enough to get a relatively weak return that will allow him to begin to dominate the point with his forehand.

You can't really argue with his results. You could possibly say that this serving strategy is less suited for tiebreaks where free points on the serve are much more important than in regular games. Ergo, he lost both tiebreaks to Fed and his tiebreak record is not all that hot.

Nadal is quite capable and fairly confident, in my opinion, in serving down the middle in the ad court. If you cheat too much to take away the wide serve, he can burn you with smoke down the middle. He did this repeatedly in the latter stages of last year's Wimbledon finals.

As you recall Nadal got smoked at the beginning of the first set of last year's Wimbledon and was down 5-0. I charted his serving pattern and he had served 11 out of the first 13 first serves to the backhand.

I believe that last year Federer received so much grief in the tennis world stemming from his inablity to return the Nadal serve at the French Open. People like Wilander were basically saying why not just stand further to the left to cover the slice and make him beat you by going the other way if he can. Federer may have used this strategy to return at Wimbledon and was giving Nadal trouble.

Near the end of the first set in the Wimbledon final last year, Nadal started serving down the middle in the ad court and he continued this for the rest of the match. He served almost 50 % of his ad points last year in the second set down the middle and he won 80% of the points.

So, I believe that Nadal is quite capable of mixing it up in the ad court.

Where I think Nadal has trouble is in the deuce court. He rarely serves the wide serve in the deuce court. This of course the serve that Fed, Sampras, and McEnroe all had mastered. ( I'm talking about the Fed and Sampras wide serve in the ad court and the Mac serve in the deuce court since Mac was a lefty like Nadal). These great servers serve wide and get the ball a few feet up the line making the serve almost unreturnable.

And, by being able to serve this wide, they force the opponent to alter the return position, making the serve down the middle more effective.

Look at Nadal's starting position in the deuce court and then compare it with the starting position in the deuce court of other lefties like Mac, Rusedski, Leconte, Gomez, Martina.

All these other lefties stand a few feet away from the center line. Nadal hugs the center line when he serves in the deuce court. I believe this gives him an even better angle for the serve down the middle but hurts his angle for going wide in the deuce court.

You can't argue with Nadal's results but I'd like to see what would happen if Nadal moved a few feet further away from the center line in the deuce court like the others and improved the wide serve.

If I were his coach and he struggled this year again on the hard courts, I'd experiment with this idea to see what happens.

Until next time,

Glenn Sheiner M.D. - author of Insider Tennis Strategies Tennis Strategy Tactics And Ideas To Help You Improve Your Game guaranteed to make you a smarter tennis player and take your tennis to the next level. Also, check out the world's top tennis humor screensaver
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Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Wimbledon Final 2007 ---Part 1

grass court tennis tactics mastery
What a final it was. A classic!The Wimbledon final of 2007 will go down in history as one of the all-time bests.

Compare it to the Wimbledon Final of 2006 and you can see that Nadal has closed the gap with Federer on grass. This was an even match.

Both guys have played each other enough and adjusted enough that the matches between them are no longer about patterns. No one is clamoring that Federer should slice more or hit down the line backhands.

It came down to pure tennis execution.

The one area where Federer is clearly superior to Nadal is in hitting aces and unreturnable first serves. Notice that I didn't say his serve is better.
Look at how often Nadal holds serve and you can begin to appreciate his serving strategy. He hits his lefty slice most of the time and makes righthanders block back a weak return into midcourt.

From there, Nadal dominates points with his forehand.

The problem with this strategy is that it's not that effective in tiebreaks where getting free points on your serve is key.

And, if Nadal had been able to split the 2 tiebreaks with Fed, we'd be looking at a new Wimbledon champion.

Let's hope the Wimbledon Final of 2008 is just as good.

Next time I'll talk about Nadal's serve from a technical point of view.
Until next time,

Glenn Sheiner M.D. - author of Insider Tennis Strategies Tennis Strategy Ideas To Help You Win More Matches guaranteed to make you a smarter tennis player and take your tennis to the next level. Also, check out the world's top tennis humor screensaver
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Friday, July 06, 2007

Rafa The Warrior And Is Federer Even In The Tournament?

grass court tennis tactics mastery

The legend of Rafa the Tennis Warrior continues to grow. And is Fed even in the draw?

The Soderling match, the comeback against Yhouzny. Who wouldn't love the competitiveness of the young Spaniard?

And as for Roger Federer, he's only played a partial set in the last week.

Wimbledon is becoming a bit of a joke with all the rain delays. It changes the dynamics of all the matches.

First of all, rain delays can remove fitness as an issue. Players like Nadal and Agassi work players over physically so that as the match goes on, their opponents start to get beat up physically.

But, with all the rain delays, a player like Soderling never had to worry about fatigue.

Secondly, the courts play so differently depending on whether the grass is dry or wet. No other slam has this discrepancy to such a degree except maybe the French where the clay can play much more slowly if there's been rain.

Thirdly, all the postponements completely destroy the rhythm of a fan. Imagine Federer has only played a partial set all week. Unbelievable!

So, bring on that roof so that we can enjoy a proper Wimbledon tournament.

Until next time,

Glenn Sheiner M.D. - author of Insider Tennis Strategies Change Your Tennis Strategy To Win More Matches guaranteed to make you a smarter tennis player and take your tennis to the next level. Also, check out the world's top tennis humor screensaver
Tennis Cartoon Screensaver
. You can download a trial version for FREE.

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