Expected Points, Feb. 19: Daniil Medvedev Defies Another Unfriendly Crowd

Expected Points, my new short, daily podcast, highlights three numbers to illustrate stats, trends, and interesting trivia around the sport.

Up today: The fast-rising Russian extends his array of win streaks, Sabalenka and Mertens win a farewell title, and Naomi Osaka looks ahead to yet another match against a player ranked outside of the top ten.

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Continue reading Expected Points, Feb. 19: Daniil Medvedev Defies Another Unfriendly Crowd

Daniil Medvedev, Novak Djokovic, and Top Ten Win Streaks

You might have heard that Daniil Medvedev has quite the streak going. He’s beaten eleven straight top-ten-ranked opponents in a row. The streak began in Paris last fall with victories against Diego Schwartzman and Alexander Zverev, continued with a perfect run in London, and crossed into double digits with a final-round ATP Cup dismissal of Matteo Berrettini. Number 11 was a straight-setter against Andrey Rublev in the Australian Open quarter-finals. He’ll go for 12 in his semi versus Stefanos Tsitsipas, with a potential 13th straight in a championship tilt with Novak Djokovic.

Eleven is pretty darn good. Since the mid-1980s, only six other players have managed that: Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer, Pete Sampras, Thomas Muster, and Ivan Lendl.

Medvedev and his streak is just at the fringes of that list, though. When we start digging deeper, we find some truly incredible accomplishments.

First off, the longest top-ten winning streak in this span belongs to Federer, who won 24 in a row between the end of 2003 and the beginning of 2005. (I found one online reference to a 26-win streak; I guess it’s possible I’m missing something or have some dates reversed, but I’ve double checked my data, and am sticking with 24.) Imagine Medvedev lasting another 52 weeks without losing to a top-ten opponent!

What truly amazes me, though, is not any individual streak. Federer strung together another 17 top-ten wins starting at Wimbledon in 2006, and if that isn’t enough, he ran off another 10-match streak in between the 24 and the 17.

Even Federer’s feats pale next to the rarely-interrupted dominance displayed by Djokovic. Novak, like Medvedev, once had an 11-match win streak against top-tenners. And that’s his seventh longest! Djokovic owns streaks of 17, 14, 14, 13, 13, 12, and 11. (For what it’s worth, he also has an active streak of 2. Could be the start of something big….)

Here’s the complete list of top-ten win streaks of at least 11 matches since 1985:

Streak  Player    Span                        
24      Federer   03 Masters Cup - 05 AO      
17      Djokovic  15 WTF - 16 Rome            
17      Federer   06 Wimb - 07 Dubai          
14      Djokovic  12 Beijing - 13 IW          
14      Djokovic  18 Wimb - WTF               
14      Nadal     12 Miami - 13 Monte Carlo   
13      Djokovic  11 AO - 11 Rome             
13      Djokovic  13 Beijing - Davis Cup F    
13      Nadal     05 Monte Carlo - 06 RG      
13      Sampras   96 WTF - 97 Paris           
12      Djokovic  15 IW - RG                  
12      Nadal     08 Monte Carlo - Toronto    
12      Nadal     13 Madrid - USO             
12      Lendl     87 Hamburg - Sydney Indoor  
12      Muster    95 Davis Cup R1 - Essen     
11      Djokovic  14 Paris - 15 Dubai         
11      Medvedev  20 Paris - 21 AO 

Nadal’s showing here is pretty good, too.

The ladies

My main priority here was to put Medvedev’s streak in perspective, but since I’ve got the code handy, let’s aim it at the WTA dataset, too.

The record–again since 1985–belongs to Martina Navratilova, who won 22 straight against top-ten opposition in ’85 and ’86. Navratilova put together another 20 or so after the first streak was broken, Serena Williams and Steffi Graf both ran off streaks around 19, and Justine Henin once won 17 in a row. I’m emphasizing the uncertainty here–and opting not to print a full list–because it will take a bit more legwork to establish exact numbers. Many of these streaks begin or end during the round-robin stage of the year-end finals, and my database doesn’t specify the sequence of those matches.

We can still get a general idea, though. Graf has five separate streaks of 10 or more top-ten wins, and Williams has four. Navratilova has three, though she almost definitely had more in late 1970s and early 1980s, a period for which I lack official ranking data.

The current level of parity on the women’s tour has kept the number of streaks down. No one has gotten to double digits since Serena’s last streak ended at the 2014 tour finals. If you’re looking to Naomi Osaka to change that, you’ll be waiting a long time, as she hasn’t played a top-ten opponent since Brisbane at the start of last year, when she lost the final to Karolina Pliskova. She isn’t quite in Medvedev territory yet–her current streak stands at zero.

Feed Forward

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Expected Points, Feb. 18: Naomi Osaka Makes the Hardest Things Look Easy

Expected Points, my new short, daily podcast, highlights three numbers to illustrate stats, trends, and interesting trivia around the sport.

Up today: Osaka continues to be the only active player with Serena’s number, Jennifer Brady advances to her first major final by the narrowest of margins, and Novak Djokovic is back in his happy place.

If you prefer reading to listening, a transcript is below.

You can subscribe on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, and elsewhere in the podcast universe.

The Expected Points podcast is still a work in progress, so please let me know what you think.

Continue reading Expected Points, Feb. 18: Naomi Osaka Makes the Hardest Things Look Easy

Podcast Episode 94: Injury Management, and How Much It Matters In Modern Tennis

Episode 94 of the Tennis Abstract Podcast, with Carl Bialik, of the Thirty Love podcast, is all about injuries.

Carl and I use the fitness sagas of Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal as a springboard to talk about injury management–the way in which players handle constant nagging injuries, whether that means adapting their tactics, changing their pace, rearranging their schedule, or just plain suffering. We also wonder how much undisclosed injury and fatigue affects match results, or if commentators focus too much on questions of physical readiness at the expense of talking about the tennis itself.

Thanks for listening!

In housekeeping notes:

  • If you’re not already listening to Expected Points, my 3- or 4-minute daily podcast covering the latest numbers in tennis, you should be. Click for today’s.
  • The TAP book club will reconvene in a few weeks with our next selection, John Updike’s 1968 novel, Couples. Read along with us, tell us what you think, and suggest topics/questions/comments for our discussion in a future episode.
  • Fans of the TA podcast will also want to check out Dangerous Exponents, Carl’s and my Covid-19 podcast. Later today, we’re releasing a new episode about hygiene theater and Covid absolutism, in which we talk a lot about measures that have long been known to be effective, but are frustratingly absent from most official recommendations and public discussion.

(Note: this week’s episode is about 49 minutes long; in some browsers the audio player may display a different length. Sorry about that!)

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Expected Points, Feb. 17: Stefanos Tsitsipas Climbs an Impossible Mountain

Expected Points, my new short, daily podcast, highlights three numbers to illustrate stats, trends, and interesting trivia around the sport.

Up today: Rafael Nadal suffers a rare five-set defeat, Daniil Medvedev continues to beat the best in the game, and the 22nd and 25th seeds set up an unlikely women’s semi-final

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The Expected Points podcast is still a work in progress, so please let me know what you think.

Expected Points, Feb. 16: Novak Djokovic Unleashes Yet Another Weapon

Expected Points, my new short, daily podcast, highlights three numbers to illustrate stats, trends, and interesting trivia around the sport.

Up today: The men’s top seed continues to battle through injury with an impressive display of serving, Serena Williams moves one match closer to her 24th slam, and no one is asking Aslan Karatsev the tough questions.

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The Expected Points podcast is still a work in progress, so please let me know what you think.

Expected Points, Feb. 15: Russians Advance On a Day of Men’s Duds

Expected Points, my new short, daily podcast, highlights three numbers to illustrate stats, trends, and interesting trivia around the sport.

On tap today: The men’s fourth round concludes with two drubbings and two injuries, Karolina Muchova keeps on winning the close ones, and Bianca Andreescu leads the field in a de facto resuscitation of the grand slam consolation draw.

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Expected Points, Feb. 14: Simona Halep Survives a Scare and Stops a Streak

Expected Points, my new short, daily podcast, highlights three numbers to illustrate stats, trends, and interesting trivia around the sport.

Iga Swiatek’s grand slam set streak ends, Aslan Karatsev goes from qualifier to quarterfinalist, and Hsieh Su Wei sets a new standard for what a 35-year-old doubles specialist is capable of.

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The Expected Points podcast is still a work in progress, so please let me know what you think.

Expected Points, Feb. 13: Rafael Nadal Remains King of the Left-Handers

Expected Points, my new short, daily podcast, highlights three numbers to illustrate stats, trends, and interesting trivia around the sport.

Rafa records another in a long line of victories against his fellow southpaws, Jessica Pegula takes a big step forward, and the Australian Open starts a five-day spell without fans.

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The Expected Points podcast is still a work in progress, so please let me know what you think.