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Djokovic targets the forehand on second serve
Second serves to the forehand.
Players typically stay away from this higher-risk strategy and kick the second serve to the less potent backhand return.
Not Novak Djokovic. Not by a long shot.
An Infosys ATP Beyond The Numbers analysis of 41 matches against right-handed opponents this season shows that Djokovic actually prefers to hit second serves to the forehand wing. By going against the grain, he collects more second-serve aces, extracts significantly more return errors and wins a higher percentage of second-serve points overall.
Opponents are sitting on a heavy kick to the backhand return. A hard slider to the forehand is what comes at them more often than not. Djokovic hit 55 per cent (382/690) of his second serves at the forehand corners versus backhand corners in both service boxes, while opponents only hit 26 per cent (164/622) to the forehand corners against him. Interestingly, Djokovic served more to the backhand return against left-handers.
Djokovic is leading the Tour in 2023 with second-serve points won at 57.91 per cent (816/1409). It’s his third-highest season total after 2015 (60.2%) and 2013 (59.61%). Directing second serves out wide in the Deuce court and down the T in the Ad court is powering these Tour-leading match metrics as much as anything else.
Deuce Court: Second Serves Wide To The Forehand Return
The numbers that show the difference in how well Djokovic utilises the wide second serve compared to his opponents are dramatic.
Second Serves: Deuce Court Wide
Direction - Deuce Court Wide Novak Djokovic Opponents
Made 174 60
Won 75% (130) 50% (30)
Aces 4 1
Return Errors Extracted 50 11
% Return Errors Extracted 29% 18%
The performance gap is staggering. Djokovic goes to this location almost three times as much as his opponents (174-60) and has won 100 more points (130-30). He extracts an error when targeting this location 29 per cent (50/174) of the time. His opponents only benefit from a return error 18 per cent (11/60) of the time.
One of Djokovic’s superpowers appears hidden in plain sight.
Ad Court: Second Serves T To The Forehand Return
Serving second serves down the T in the Ad court also clearly catches opponents off guard.
Direction - Ad Court T Novak Djokovic Opponents
Made 208 104
Won 70% (146) 50% (52)
Aces 13 1
Return Errors Extracted 41 18
% Return Errors Extracted 20% 17%
Djokovic collected 13 aces to this specific location, while opponents only managed a solitary ace. Djokovic won precisely 100 more points (130-30) than his opponents in the Deuce court out wide and won almost 100 more (146-52) with the slider down the T in the Ad court.
At some stage, you would think opponents should pick up on this surprise serve and shut it down. But Djokovic has been employing variations of this strategy for several seasons, and he keeps taking it to new levels. The reasons why it works so well are four-fold.
1. Djokovic wins the mental game of surprising his opponent. He reads the opponent’s mind better than they do of him. He knows when they are not expecting it.
2. The larger size of the forehand return backswing can be immediately attacked.
3. He hits this specific serve considerably faster than his regular kick second serve to the backhand. Multiple speeds to multiple directions create confusion in opponents' minds.
4. He receives more Serve +1 forehands. He hit 50 per cent (473/945) Serve +1 forehands in these matches behind second serves, winning 57 per cent (271/473). Opponents only hit 44 per cent (514/1171) Serve +1 forehands, also winning just 44 per cent (227/514).
Djokovic’s favourite second-serve location appears to be a mystery to his opponents. He backs himself against their perceived strength by taking advantage of multiple weaknesses.
Djokovic Teams With Kecmanovic For Paris Doubles Victory
Spoiler:
Serbian playing doubles in Paris for fourth time
Novak Djokovic will begin his chase for a record-extending seventh title at the Rolex Paris Masters when he competes on Wednesday. Before focusing on singles, though, the Serbian took to court on Tuesday in doubles, teaming with countryman Miomir Kecmanovic to reach the second round.
Djokovic and Kecmanovic swept past Gonzalo Escobar and Aleksandr Nedovyesov 6-4, 6-2 in 68 minutes at the ATP Masters 100 event.
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The Serbians won 67 per cent (12/18) of points on Escobar and Nedovyesov’s second serves, breaking four times to set a second-round meeting against third seeds Rohan Bopanna and Matthew Ebden.
Djokovic will face Tomas Martin Etcheverry in his opening singles match on Wednesday. The 36-year-old is aiming for another deep run in Paris to boost his ATP Year-End No. 1 presented by Pepperstone chances. The Serbian leads Carlos Alcaraz by 500 points in the Pepperstone ATP Live Race To Turin, which serves as a barometer for the year-end World No. 1 battle.
Djokovic Continues March Towards Year-End No. 1 In Paris
Spoiler:
Serbian chasing record-extending seventh Rolex Paris Masters title
Novak Djokovic tightened his grip on the ATP Year-End No. 1 presented by Pepperstone honour Wednesday when he moved past Tomas Martin Etcheverry 6-3, 6-2 to reach the third round at the Rolex Paris Masters.
The World No. 1 leads Carlos Alcaraz by 580 points in the Pepperstone ATP Live Race To Turin and could extended his advantage to 1,495 points by winning a record-extending seventh title in Paris-Bercy after the Spaniard lost in his opening match on Tuesday.
In front of a packed crowd on Court Central, Djokovic was in complete control against Etcheverry, who has tracked his ATP Pepperstone Ranking position in comparison to the Serbian in recent years.
The 36-year-old hit with precision from the baseline, pulling the Argentine from corner to corner. He broke Etcheverry’s serve three times and committed just nine unforced errors to advance after one hour and 23 minutes. The 96-time tour-level champion holds a standout 46-9 record at the indoor hard-court event.
Djokovic is chasing a record-extending 40th ATP Masters 1000 title and will next play Dutchman Tallon Griekspoor. The top seed, who is 47-5 on the year, is competing in singles for the first time since the Davis Cup in September. He has lifted major trophies at the Australian Open, Roland Garros and US Open this year, while also triumphing in Cincinnati and Adelaide.
Djokovic: 'I Was Never Satisfied With Anything But No. 1'
Spoiler:
Serbian's time as No. 1 documented in ATP Legacy feature
At age 36, Novak Djokovic has accomplished almost everything possible in tennis. The Serbian's next milestone could be becoming the first player to reach 400 weeks as the World No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.
The 24-time major champion, who has held the top spot for a record 397 weeks, shared some of his career-best memories and what has kept his fire ignited in the latest ATP Uncovered ‘Legacy’ feature.
“I was never satisfied with anything else but No. 1,” Djokovic said. “I always wanted to win Wimbledon and be No. 1. Those were the two childhood dreams.”
Watch the full video below to relive what Djokovic said following his first tour-level title in 2006, highlights of several key moments throughout his journey and see how he has climbed the ladder of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.
Djokovic Narrowly Avoids Becoming Latest Paris Upset Victim
Spoiler:
Serbian could see Paris rematch with Rune in quarters
Novak Djokovic was on the brink of becoming the latest upset victim at the Rolex Paris Masters on Thursday night. Instead, he battled back from a set down to defeat Tallon Griekspoor and advance to his ninth straight quarter-final at the event.
The Serbian won the final eight points of the match to escape with a 4-6, 7-6(2), 6-4 victory, extending his winning streak to 15 matches and tightening his grip on the No. 1 Pepperstone ATP Ranking. He now leads Carlos Alcaraz — who was upset by Roman Safiullin in his Paris opener — by 670 points in the Pepperstone ATP Live Race To Turin, which serves as a barometer in the battle for year-end No. 1.
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Following the match, Djokovic revealed he was struggling with a stomach issue — though he was full of praise for Griekspoor's effort.
"I don't want to take anything away from his performance. He didn't drop the level," the Serbian said. "Maybe in the third set a few games he did a bit, but he was playing at a very high level and credit to him for that performance. If he would be the winner tonight, it would be absolutely deserved.
"I started off well but I ran out of steam. I've been struggling the last couple of days with my stomach and I just didn't feel myself at all. I was just trying to hold my serve and get to a tie-break, which happened in the second. I got lucky on a couple of shots there. It could have easily gone his way, but overall I played a good tie-break and I started to feel better in the third. I'm really, really glad to overcome this challenge."
The result kept Djokovic on course for his record-extending seventh Paris singles title by reaching his 11th quarter-final at the ATP Masters 1000. It's the Serbian's 10th quarter-final in 11 events this season, the lone exception a third-round exit in Monte-Carlo.
Griekspoor provided a stern test behind a brilliant serving performance, and stunned the World No. 1 by winning five straight games — including a run of 10 consecutive points — to snatch the opening set from 1-4. Finding joy with his loopy forehand swing, the Dutch No. 1 then created three break points in the second set as he pressed home his advantage.
Djokovic held firm with two big serves to erase break chances at 4-4 and then demonstrated his uncanny ability in tie-breaks with a near-flawless performance to regain control of the centre court showdown. On the season, Djokovic is now 27-5 in tie-breaks according to ATP Infosys Stats, the best record on the ATP Tour.
Griekspoor remained a threat in the final set, breaking for the third time to level the decider at 4-4 before Djokovic snapped back to win the final two games of the match to love.
Next up for Djokovic — the lone top four seed in the quarters — is a meeting with sixth seed Holger Rune or Germany's Daniel Altmaier. A fourth Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting with Rune would give Djokovic a chance to level their series at 2-2; the Dane beat Djokovic in last year's Paris final and again this season in the Rome quarters.
Griekspoor moved up two places this week to No. 21 in the Pepperstone ATP Live Rankings, setting himself up to achieve a career high for the second straight week in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.