AN ANALYSIS OF TEN YEARS OF THE FOUR GRAND SLAM MEN'S SINGLES DATA FOR LACK OF INDEPENDENCE OF SET OUTCOMES

The objective of this paper is to use data from the highest level in men's tennis to assess whether there is any evidence to reject the hypothesis that the two players in a match have a constant probability of winning each set in the match. The data consists of all 4883 matches of grand slam me...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Denny Meyer, Rod Cross, Graham Pollard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Uludag 2006-12-01
Series:Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jssm.org/vol5/n4/13/v5n4-13text.php
id doaj-34d11d3a7f694f808c32e88b99932c0d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-34d11d3a7f694f808c32e88b99932c0d2020-11-25T01:12:25ZengUniversity of UludagJournal of Sports Science and Medicine1303-29682006-12-0154561566AN ANALYSIS OF TEN YEARS OF THE FOUR GRAND SLAM MEN'S SINGLES DATA FOR LACK OF INDEPENDENCE OF SET OUTCOMESDenny MeyerRod CrossGraham PollardThe objective of this paper is to use data from the highest level in men's tennis to assess whether there is any evidence to reject the hypothesis that the two players in a match have a constant probability of winning each set in the match. The data consists of all 4883 matches of grand slam men's singles over a 10 year period from 1995 to 2004. Each match is categorised by its sequence of win (W) or loss (L) (in set 1, set 2, set 3,...) to the eventual winner. Thus, there are several categories of matches from WWW to LLWWW. The methodology involves fitting several probabilistic models to the frequencies of the above ten categories. One four-set category is observed to occur significantly more often than the other two. Correspondingly, a couple of the five-set categories occur more frequently than the others. This pattern is consistent when the data is split into two five-year subsets. The data provides significant statistical evidence that the probability of winning a set within a match varies from set to set. The data supports the conclusion that, at the highest level of men's singles tennis, the better player (not necessarily the winner) lifts his play in certain situations at least some of the timehttp://www.jssm.org/vol5/n4/13/v5n4-13text.phpData analysisindependence in tennisconstant probabilitiespsychological development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Denny Meyer
Rod Cross
Graham Pollard
spellingShingle Denny Meyer
Rod Cross
Graham Pollard
AN ANALYSIS OF TEN YEARS OF THE FOUR GRAND SLAM MEN'S SINGLES DATA FOR LACK OF INDEPENDENCE OF SET OUTCOMES
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Data analysis
independence in tennis
constant probabilities
psychological development
author_facet Denny Meyer
Rod Cross
Graham Pollard
author_sort Denny Meyer
title AN ANALYSIS OF TEN YEARS OF THE FOUR GRAND SLAM MEN'S SINGLES DATA FOR LACK OF INDEPENDENCE OF SET OUTCOMES
title_short AN ANALYSIS OF TEN YEARS OF THE FOUR GRAND SLAM MEN'S SINGLES DATA FOR LACK OF INDEPENDENCE OF SET OUTCOMES
title_full AN ANALYSIS OF TEN YEARS OF THE FOUR GRAND SLAM MEN'S SINGLES DATA FOR LACK OF INDEPENDENCE OF SET OUTCOMES
title_fullStr AN ANALYSIS OF TEN YEARS OF THE FOUR GRAND SLAM MEN'S SINGLES DATA FOR LACK OF INDEPENDENCE OF SET OUTCOMES
title_full_unstemmed AN ANALYSIS OF TEN YEARS OF THE FOUR GRAND SLAM MEN'S SINGLES DATA FOR LACK OF INDEPENDENCE OF SET OUTCOMES
title_sort analysis of ten years of the four grand slam men's singles data for lack of independence of set outcomes
publisher University of Uludag
series Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
issn 1303-2968
publishDate 2006-12-01
description The objective of this paper is to use data from the highest level in men's tennis to assess whether there is any evidence to reject the hypothesis that the two players in a match have a constant probability of winning each set in the match. The data consists of all 4883 matches of grand slam men's singles over a 10 year period from 1995 to 2004. Each match is categorised by its sequence of win (W) or loss (L) (in set 1, set 2, set 3,...) to the eventual winner. Thus, there are several categories of matches from WWW to LLWWW. The methodology involves fitting several probabilistic models to the frequencies of the above ten categories. One four-set category is observed to occur significantly more often than the other two. Correspondingly, a couple of the five-set categories occur more frequently than the others. This pattern is consistent when the data is split into two five-year subsets. The data provides significant statistical evidence that the probability of winning a set within a match varies from set to set. The data supports the conclusion that, at the highest level of men's singles tennis, the better player (not necessarily the winner) lifts his play in certain situations at least some of the time
topic Data analysis
independence in tennis
constant probabilities
psychological development
url http://www.jssm.org/vol5/n4/13/v5n4-13text.php
work_keys_str_mv AT dennymeyer ananalysisoftenyearsofthefourgrandslammenssinglesdataforlackofindependenceofsetoutcomes
AT rodcross ananalysisoftenyearsofthefourgrandslammenssinglesdataforlackofindependenceofsetoutcomes
AT grahampollard ananalysisoftenyearsofthefourgrandslammenssinglesdataforlackofindependenceofsetoutcomes
AT dennymeyer analysisoftenyearsofthefourgrandslammenssinglesdataforlackofindependenceofsetoutcomes
AT rodcross analysisoftenyearsofthefourgrandslammenssinglesdataforlackofindependenceofsetoutcomes
AT grahampollard analysisoftenyearsofthefourgrandslammenssinglesdataforlackofindependenceofsetoutcomes
_version_ 1725166398049615872