Does Jannik Sinner have the best serve, return, forehand and backhand on the ATP now?
You can argue about each or all of these claims in my image, and I don't think any are definitive. Still, that only one player can be arguably called the best in all four of these categories makes a statement. Sinner is threatening to become the first since these records were kept to lead the ATP in both percent of service games won and percent of return games won for the year. The forehand and backhand "quality" are harder to measure. I'll posit that the main measure that drives La Carotta's success on hard courts is his ability to "steal time" but holding the baseline ala Fed and Novak, while hitting with constant pace and depth so his opponent can't get one swing "off". No one can just play a neutral rally ball or two. A simple, deep groundstroke up the middle and be put away. There is no safe place to go.
filedata/fetch?id=108556&d=1762111170&type=thumb
(c)jfawcette
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You can argue about each or all of these claims in my image, and I don't think any are definitive. Still, that only one player can be arguably called the best in all four of these categories makes a statement. Sinner is threatening to become the first since these records were kept to lead the ATP in both percent of service games won and percent of return games won for the year. The forehand and backhand "quality" are harder to measure. I'll posit that the main measure that drives La Carotta's success on hard courts is his ability to "steal time" but holding the baseline ala Fed and Novak, while hitting with constant pace and depth so his opponent can't get one swing "off". No one can just play a neutral rally ball or two. A simple, deep groundstroke up the middle and be put away. There is no safe place to go.
filedata/fetch?id=108556&d=1762111170&type=thumb
(c)jfawcette
#


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