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Tennis scoring system


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A tennis tournament (also called a championship) is organized
into matches between players (for singles tournaments) or teams
of two players (for doubles tournaments). The matches of a
tournament are grouped into rounds. In round 1, all players (or
teams) are paired and play against each other in matches. The
losers are said to leave, or be out. They no longer compete in the
tournament (this is single elimination). The winners are again
paired to play in the matches of the next round. The tournament
continues until the quarterfinal round (having eight players or
teams playing in pairs), then the semifinal round (having four
players or teams playing in pairs), and finally the final round
(having only two players or teams) are played. The winner of the
final round is declared the winner of the entire tournament.

Final score of the 2005 singles final of the SAP


Open in San Jose of Andy Roddick vs Cyril Saulnier.

A tennis match is composed of points, games, and sets. A match


is won when a player or a doubles team wins the majority of prescribed sets. Traditionally, matches are either a best
of three sets or best of five sets format. The best of five set format is typically only played in the Men's singles
matches at Majors and Davis Cup matches.
A set consists of a number of games (a minimum of six), which in turn consist of points, with a tiebreak played if the
set is tied at six games per player. Tennis scoring rests on the premise that serving is advantageous over receiving,
hence it is only possible to win a set or match by breaking the opponent's service game at least once, before a
tiebreak is required. Likewise, it is not possible to win a tiebreak without winning at least one point during an
opponent's turn at serve (called a mini-break).
Contents [hide]
1 Game score
1.1 Description
1.2 History
1.3 Alternative game scoring
2 Set score
2.1 Description
2.2 Scoring a tiebreak game
2.3 History of the tiebreak
2.4 Alternative set scoring format
3 Match score
3.1 Description
3.2 Total points won
3.3 Total games won
4 Announcing the score
4.1 Variations and slang
5 Scorecards
6 Notes
7 References

Game score

[edit]

Description [edit]
A game consists of a sequence of points played with the same player serving, and is won by the first player (or
players) to have won at least four points by two points or more over their opponent. In scoring an individual standard
game of tennis, the server's score is always called first and the opponent's score second. Score calling is unique to
the sport of tennis in that each point has a corresponding call that is synonymous with that point value.
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Number of points won Corresponding call[1]


0

"love"

"15"

"30"

"40"

"game"

In tennis, scoring in tie situations in which both players have won the same number of points also varies. When
players are tied by one or two points, the score is described as "15-all" and "30-all", or "15-up" and "30-up",
respectively. However, if each player has won three points, the score is described as "deuce" rather than "40all".
From this point on, whenever the score is tied, it is described as "deuce" regardless of how many points have been
played.
In standard play, scoring beyond a "deuce" score, in which both players have scored three points each, requires that
one player must get two points ahead in order to win the game. This type of tennis scoring is known as "advantage
scoring" (or "ads"). In this type of scoring, the player who wins the next point after deuce is said to have the
advantage. If the player with advantage loses the next point, the score is again deuce, since the score is tied. If the
player with the advantage wins the next point, that player has won the game, since the player now leads by two points.
When the server is the player with the advantage, the score may be stated by him or her before the next point as
"advantage in." When the server's opponent has the advantage, the server may state the score as "advantage out."
These phrases are sometimes shortened to "ad in" and "ad out." Alternatively, the server may simply use players'
names; in professional tournaments the umpire announces the score in this format (e.g., "advantage Federer" or
"advantage Murray").
The table below shows the scoring for tie breaks:
Tie break point score examples Corresponding call
34
43
44, 55, 66, etc.
47

"set"

The current point score is announced orally before each point by the judge, or by the server if there is no judge.
When stating the score, the server's score is stated first. If the server (or the judge) announces the score as "30
love", for example, it means that the server has won two points and the receiver none.
In the USTA rule book (but not the ITF rules) there is the comment: 'Zero, one, two, and three, may be
substituted for Love, 15, 30, and 40. This is particularly appropriate for matches with an inexperienced player
or in which one player does not understand English.'[2]

History [edit]
The origins of the 15, 30, and 40 scores are believed to be medieval French. The earliest reference is in a ballad by
Charles D'Orleans in 1435 which refers to quarante cinque (which gave rise to our 40) and in 1522 there is a
sentence in Latin "we are winning thirty, we are winning forty-five". The first recorded theories about the origin of
fifteen were published in 1555 and 1579. However the origins of this convention remain obscure.[3]
It is possible that clock faces were used on court, with a quarter move of the hand to indicate a score of 15, 30, and
45. When the hand moved to 60, the game was over. However, in order to ensure that the game could not be won by
a one-point difference in players' scores, the idea of "deuce" was introduced. To make the score stay within the "60"
ticks on the clock face, the 45 was changed to 40. Therefore, if both players have 40, the first player to score
receives ten and that moves the clock to 50. If the player scores a second time before the opponent is able to score,
they are awarded another ten and the clock moves to 60. The 60 signifies the end of the game. However, if a player
fails to score twice in a row, then the clock would move back to 40 to establish another "deuce".[4][5][6]
Another theory is that the scoring nomenclature came from the French game jeu de paume (a precursor to tennis
which initially used the hand instead of a racket). Jeu de paume was very popular before the French revolution, with
more than 1,000 courts in Paris alone. The traditional court was 90 ft in total with 45 ft on each side. When the server
scored, he moved forward 15 ft. If he scored again, he would move another 15 ft. If he scored a third time, he could
only move 10 ft closer.[7]
The origin of the use of "love" for zero is also disputed. It is possible that it derives from the French expression for
"the egg" (l'uf) because an egg looks like the number zero.[8][9] This is similar to the origin of the term "duck" in
cricket, supposedly from "duck's egg", referring to a batsman who has been called out without completing a run. One

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possibility comes from the Dutch expression iets voor lof doen, which means to do something for praise, implying no
monetary stakes.[10] Another theory on the origins of the use of "love" comes from the acceptance that, at the start of
any match, when scores are at zero, players still have "love for each other".[11]

Alternative game scoring [edit]


A popular alternative to advantage scoring is "no-advantage" (or "no-ad") scoring, created by James Van Alen in
order to shorten match playing time.[12] No-advantage scoring is a scoring method in which the first player to reach
four points wins the game. No-ad scoring eliminates the requirement that a player must win by two points. Therefore, if
the game is tied at deuce, the next player to win a point wins the game. This method of scoring is used in most World
TeamTennis matches.[13][14] When this style of play is implemented, at deuce, the receiver then chooses from which
side of the court he desires to return his opponent's serve. However, in no-ad mixed doubles play gender always
serves to the same gender at game point and during the final point of tiebreaks.[15]

Set score

[edit]

Description [edit]
In tennis, a set consists of a sequence of games played with alternating service and return roles. There are two types
of set formats that require different types of scoring.[16]
An advantage set is played until a player or team wins 6 games and that player or team has a 2-game lead over their
opponent(s). The set continues, without tiebreaker, until a player or team wins the set by 2 games. Advantage sets
are no longer played under the rules of the United States Tennis Association,[17] however they are still used in the
final sets in men's and women's draws in both singles and doubles of Wimbledon, Fed Cup, and Davis Cup. Mixed
doubles at the Grand Slams are a best-of-three format with the final set being played as a "Super-Tie Break"
(sometimes referred to as a "best of two" format) except at Wimbledon, which still plays a best-of-three match with the
final set played as an advantage set and the first two played as tie-break sets.
A tie-break set is played with the same rules as the Advantage Set, except when the score is tied at 66, a tie-break
game (or tiebreaker) is played. Typically, the tie-break game continues until one player wins seven points by a margin
of two or more points. However, many tie-break games are played with different tiebreak point requirements, such as
8 or 10 points.
Advantage sets have a tendency to go significantly longer than tie-break sets. The 2010 Wimbledon first-round match
between John Isner and Nicolas Mahut, which is the longest professional tennis match in history, notably ended with
Isner winning the 5th set, 7068. The match lasted in total 11 hours and 5 minutes with the 5th set alone lasting 8
hours, 11 minutes.
Nevertheless, even tie-break sets can last a long time. For instance, once players reach 66 set score and also reach
66 tiebreaker score, play must continue until one player has a 2 point advantage, which can take a considerable
time. Sets decided by tiebreakers, however, are typically significantly shorter than extended advantage sets.
The score of games within a set is counted in the ordinary manner, except when a player or team has a score of no
games it is read as "love". The score is written using digits separated by a dash. This score is announced by the
judge or server at the start of each game.
Example set scores Corresponding verbal set score
00

"love love"

75

"set"

36

"set"

In doubles, service alternates between the teams. One player serves for an entire service game, with that player's
partner serving for the entirety of the team's next service game. Players of the receiving team receive the serve on
alternating points, with each player of the receiving team declaring which side of the court (deuce or ad side) they will
receive serve on for the duration of the set.
The set is won by the first player (or team) to have won at least six games and at least two games more than his or
her opponent. Traditionally, sets would be played until both these criteria had been met, with no maximum number of
games. To shorten matches, James Van Alen created a tie-breaker system, which was widely introduced in the early
1970s. If the score reaches 65, one further game is played. If the leading player wins this game, he wins the set 75.
If the trailing player wins the game, the score is tied at 66 and a special tiebreaker game is played. The winner of the
tiebreak wins the set by a score of 76. The tiebreak is sometimes not employed for the final set of a match, so that
the deciding set must be played until one player or team has won two more games than the opponent. This is true in
three of the four major tennis championships, all except the US Open where a tiebreak is played even in the deciding
set (fifth set for the men, third set for the women) at 66. A tiebreak is not played in the deciding set in the other three
majorsthe Australian Open, the French Open, and Wimbledon. (When the tiebreak was first introduced at
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Wimbledon in 1971, it was invoked at 88 rather than 66.)

Scoring a tiebreak game [edit]


At a score of 66, a set is often determined by one more game called a "twelve point tiebreaker." Only one more
game is played to determine the winner of the set; the score of the set is always 76 (or 67). Points are counted
using ordinary numbering. The set is decided by the player who wins at least seven points in the tiebreak but also has
two points more than his opponent. For example, if the score is 6 points to 5 points and the player with 6 points wins
the next point, he wins the tiebreak and the set. If the player with 5 points wins the point, the tiebreak continues and
cannot be won on the next point, since no player will be two points better than his opponent. In scoring, sometimes the
tiebreak points are also included, for example 76 (75). Another way of listing the score of the tiebreak is to list only
the loser's points. For example, if the score is listed as 76 (8), the tiebreak score was 108 (since 8 is the loser's
points, and the winner must win by two points).
The player who would normally be serving after 66 is the one to serve first in the tiebreak, and the tiebreak is
considered a service game for this player. The server begins his service from the deuce court and serves one point.
After the first point, the serve changes to the first server's opponent. Each player then serves two consecutive points
for the remainder of the tiebreak. The first of each two-point sequence starts from the server's advantage court and
the second starts from the deuce court. In this way, the sum of the scores is even when the server serves from the
deuce court. After every six points, the players switch ends of the court; a noticeable fact is that the side-changes
during the tiebreak will occur in the middle of a server's two-point sequence. At the end of the tiebreak, the players
switch ends of the court again, since the set score is always odd (13 games).
An alternative tie-break system called the Coman tie-break is sometimes used by the United States Tennis
Association. Scoring is the same, but end changes take place after the first point and then after every four points.
This approach allows the servers of doubles teams to continue serving from the same end of the court as during the
body of the set. It also reduces the advantage the elements (e.g. wind and sun) could give playing the first six points
of a seven point tiebreak on one side of the court.

History of the tiebreak [edit]


The tiebreak was invented by James Van Alen in 1965 after an earlier, unsuccessful attempt to speed up the game by
the use of his so-called Van Alen Streamlined Scoring System (VASSS). For two years before the Open Era, in 1955
and 1956, the United States Pro Championship in Cleveland, Ohio was played by VASSS rules. The scoring was the
same as that in table tennis, with sets played to 21 points and players alternating five services, with no second
service. The rules were created partially to limit the effectiveness of the powerful service of the reigning professional
champion, Pancho Gonzales. Even with the new rules, however, Gonzales beat Pancho Segura in the finals of both
tournaments. Even though the 1955 match went to 5 sets, with Gonzales barely holding on to win the last one 2119,
it is reported to have taken 47 minutes to complete.[18] The fans attending the matches preferred the traditional rules,
however, and in 1957 the tournament reverted to the old method of scoring.
Impetus to use the tiebreak gained force after a monumental 1969 struggle at Wimbledon between Pancho Gonzales
and Charlie Pasarell. This was a 5-set match that lasted five hours and 12 minutes and took 2 days to complete. In
the fifth set the 41-year-old Gonzales won all seven match points that Pasarell had against him, twice coming back
from 040 deficits. The final score was 2224, 16, 1614, 63, 119.
In 1971 the tiebreak was introduced at Wimbledon when the score in any set except the final set reached 88 in
games.
In 1979 Wimbledon changed their rules so that a tie break would be played once any set, except the final set,
reached 66 in games.
In 1989 Davis Cup adopted the tie-break in all sets except for the final set.
In 2001 the Australian Open replaced the final set of mixed doubles with a match tie-break (first to 10 points and win
by two points wins the match).[19] Despite some criticism of the change by fans and former pros,[20] the US Open and
the French Open have since gone on to join the Australian Open in using the same format for mixed doubles.
Wimbledon continues to play a traditional best of three match with the final set being an advantage set.
Tie-break sets are now nearly universal in all levels of play, even in final sets; however, the tie-break is not a
compulsory element in any set, and the actual formatting of sets and tie-breaks depends on the tournament director
in tournaments, and in private matches on the players' agreement before the match begins. Tie-breaks are not used
in the final set in the Australian Open for singles, French Open for singles, Wimbledon, the Olympics, Davis Cup, or
Fed Cup. The US Open is the only major tournament to use a tiebreak in the final set for singles. The Australian
Open and French Open do, however, use the final set tiebreak for men's and women's doubles.

Alternative set scoring format [edit]


While traditional sets continue until a player wins at least six games by a margin of at least two games there are some
alternative set scoring formats in use. A common alternative set format is the eight game pro set. Instead of playing
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until one player reaches six games with a margin of two games, one plays until one player wins eight games with a
margin of two games. A tie-break is then played at eight games all. While the format is not used in modern
professional matches or recognized by the ITF rules, it was supposedly used in early professional tours. It is
commonly utilized in various amateur leagues and high school tennis as a shorter alternative to a best of three match,
but longer than a traditional tie-break set. In addition, eight game pro sets were used during doubles for all Division I
college dual matches, until the 2014-2015 season.[21]
Another alternative set format are so called "short sets" where the first to four games to win by two games. In this
format a tie-break is played at four games all. The ITF experimented with this format in low level Davis Cup matches,
but the experiment was not continued. Nevertheless this alternative remains as an acceptable alternative in the ITF
rules of Tennis.[22]
Another alternative set format is seen in World Team Tennis where the winner of a set is the first to win five games
and a nine point tie-break is played at 44.

Match score

[edit]

Description [edit]
Most singles matches consist of an odd number of sets, the match winner being the player who wins more than half of
the sets. The match ends as soon as this winning condition is met. Men's singles and doubles matches may consist of
up to five sets (the winner being the first to take the majority of total allocated sets) while women's singles matches
are usually best of three sets. Doubles matches (including mixed doubles) are usually best of three sets, with a Super
Tiebreak to ten points played if the score reaches a set all.
While the alternation of service between games continues throughout the match without regard to sets, the ends are
changed after each odd game within a set (including the last game). If, for example, the second set of a match ends
with the score at 63, 16, the ends are changed as the last game played was the 7th (odd) game of the set and in
spite of it being the 16th (even) game of the match. Notably, in situations where a set ends with an odd game, back to
back games see change of endsi.e., ends are changed before and after the first game of the following set. A
tiebreaker game is treated as a single game for the purposes of this alternation. Since tiebreakers always result in a
score of 76, there is always a court change after the tiebreaker.
The score of a complete match may be given simply by sets won, or with the scores of each set given separately. In
either case, the match winner's score is stated first. In the former, shorter form, a match might be listed as 31 (i.e.
three sets to one). In the latter form, this same match might be further described as "75, 67 (47), 64, 76 (86)".
(As noted above, an alternate form of writing the tiebreak score lists only the loser's scoree.g., "67 (4)" for the
second set in the example.) This match was won three sets to one, with the match loser winning the second set on a
tiebreaker. The numbers in parentheses, normally included in printed scorelines but omitted when spoken, indicate
the duration of the tiebreaker following a given set. Here, the match winner lost the second-set tiebreaker 74 and
won the fourth-set tiebreaker 86.

Total points won [edit]


Because tennis is scored set by set and game by game, a player may lose a match despite winning the majority of
points and/or games played.
Consider a player who wins six games in each of two sets, all by a score of game-30. The winner has scored 4x12 =
48 points and the loser 2x12 = 24. Suppose also that the loser wins four games in each set, all by a score of gamelove. The loser has scored 4x8 = 32 points and the winner zero in those games. The final score is a win by 64, 64;
total points 4856.
An example of this in actual practice was the record-breaking Isner-Mahut match in the Wimbledon first round, 2224
June 2010. John Isner of the USA beat Nicolas Mahut of France 64, 36, 67(7), 76(3), 7068 Mahut winning a
total of 502 points to Isner's 478.[23]

Total games won [edit]


Likewise, a player may lose a match despite winning the majority of games played (or win a match despite losing the
majority of games). Roger Federer won the 2009 Wimbledon final over Andy Roddick (57, 76(6), 76(5), 36, 16
14) despite Roddick's winning more games (39, versus Federer's 38).

Announcing the score

[edit]

If there is no judge to announce the score of a match, there is a specific protocol for stating the score. During a game,
the server has the responsibility to announce the game score before he serves. He does this by announcing his score
first. If, for example, the server loses the first three points of his service game, he would say, "Love, 40." This
convention is used consistently. After a set is complete, the server, before serving for the first game of the next set,

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announces the set scores so far completed in the match, stating his scores first. If he has won the first two sets and is
beginning the third, he would say, "Two, love, new set." If he had lost the first two sets, he would say, "Love, two, new
set." Finally, after the completion of the match, either player, when asked the score, announces his scores first.
As an example, consider a match between Victoria Azarenka and Ana Ivanovic. Azarenka wins the first set 64,
Ivanovic wins the next set 76(74), and Azarenka wins the final set 60.
At the end of each set, the umpire would announce the winner of each set:
Game, first set, Azarenka.
Game, second set, Ivanovic.
At the completion of the match, the result would be announced as:
Game, set, match, (Victoria) Azarenka, two sets to one, six-four, six-seven, six-love.
The result would be written as:
Victoria Azarenka defeated

Ana Ivanovic 64, 67(47), 60

The score is always written and announced in respect to the winner of the match. The score of the tiebreak is not
included in announcing the final result; it is simply said "sevensix" regardless of the outcome of the tiebreak.

Variations and slang [edit]


During informal play of tennis, especially at tennis clubs in the USA (also in other English speaking countries), score
announcements are frequently shortened with the use of abbreviations. For example, a score fifteen is replaced with
"five", or in some cases "fif". Similarly, the scores of thirty and forty may sometimes be spoken as "three" or "four"
respectively. A score of fifteen-all may sometimes be announced as "fives." To further confuse score announcements,
a score of thirty-all (3030) may often be called "deuce" and the following point referred to as "ad-in" or "ad-out"
depending on which player (or team) won the point. The logic for this is that a thirty all score is effectively the same as
deuce (4040).[24][better source needed]

Scorecards

[edit]

For formal scorekeeping, the official scoring the match (e.g. the
chair umpire) fills out a scorecard, either on paper or
electronically. The scorecard allows the official to record details
for each point, as well as rule violations and other match
information. Standard markings for each point are:[25]
/ point won
A point won via ace
D point won via double-fault
C point won via code violation
T point won via time violation
An additional dot is marked in a score box to indicate a missed
first serve fault.

Notes

Sample scorecard, from IsnerMahut at


Wimbledon 2010

[edit]

1. ^ ITF, "Rules of Tennis 2010" p.5 http://www.itftennis.com/shared/medialibrary/pdf/original/IO_46376_original.PDF Last


visited: 11 September 2010.
2. ^ Friend at Court (PDF). United States Tennis Association. 2013. p. 7. Retrieved 1 July 2014.
3. ^ Whitman, Malcolm (2004). "The Mystery of Fifteen in Scoring". Tennis: Origin and mysteries (reprint of 1932 edition
ed.). Dover Publications.
4. ^ "Wonderopolis: Does Love Conquer All In Tennis?" . Retrieved 29 January 2014.
5. ^ "The Baltimore Sun: A scoring system you have to love" . Retrieved 29 January 2014.
6. ^ Hart, Jay. "Yahoo Sports: So What's Up With The Strange Scoring System?" . Retrieved 29 January 2014.
7. ^ Franoise Bonnefoy (1991). Jeu de Paume: History. Runion des muses nationaux. p. 42. ISBN 9782908901016.
8. ^ Palmatier, Robert. Speaking of animals: a dictionary of animal metaphors , page 245 (1995).
9. ^ Horn, Geoffrey. Rafael Nadal , page 13 (2006).
10. ^ Bondt, Cees de (1993) Heeft yemant lust met bal, of met reket te spelen...? Hilversum: Uitgeverij Verloren p. 10
11. ^ Collynshum, Cirt Frijk (1971) Brikt noordjest tennis ul areven Kreb.: Steken of en lad Verk p. 132
12. ^ USTA (n.d.). "Improving your game: Scoring" . United States Tennis Association. Retrieved 21 April 2010.
13. ^ "USTA: Improve Your Game" . Retrieved 29 January 2014.
14. ^ "WTT Rules" . Retrieved 29 January 2014.
15. ^ [1] , ITF "Rules of Tennis 2010", Appendix IV Alternative Procedures and Scoring Methods
16. ^ ITF, "Rules of Tennis 2010" p. 6 http://www.itftennis.com/shared/medialibrary/pdf/original/IO_46376_original.PDF
Last visited: 22 April 2010.
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17. ^ Last visited 22 April 2010.


18. ^ USTA Midwest,http://www.midwest.usta.com/content/custom.sps?iType=1435&icustompageid=2647
19. ^ CNNSI.com, "Reactions: Mixed doubles, Responses overwhelmingly against new format"
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/your_turn/news/2001/01/16/reactions_mixeddoubles/ Last visited: 5 July 2010.
20. ^ "What They're Saying about Tiebreakers Replacing Third Sets . . ." http://www.tennisconfidential.com/articles6.htm
Last visited: 5 July 2010.
21. ^ Improving your game | Scoring http://www.usta.com/Improve-Your-Game/Rules/Rules-and-Line-Calls/Scoring/
22. ^ Rules of Tennis 2010 http://www.itftennis.com/shared/medialibrary/pdf/original/IO_46376_original.PDF
23. ^ "Wimbledon Championships Website" . Wimbledon.org. 1998-09-21. Retrieved 2014-06-28.
24. ^ "Why do club players say "five" not "fifteen" when scoring? - Talk Tennis" . Tt.tennis-warehouse.com. Retrieved
2014-06-28.
25. ^ USTA Chair Umpire Handbook

References

[edit]

Faulkner, Trish & Lemelman, Vivian, The Complete Idiot's Guide to Tennis. New York: Macmillan Publishing, 1999.
Categories: Tennis Tennis terminology Scoring (sport)

This page was last modified on 30 June 2015, at 17:33.


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