Important note: the NTRP and UTR rating comparisons on my chart are VERY rough. Depending on where you live the numbers might match up very differently. One of the countless reasons why tennis ratings are so confusing!
@DominicThompsonvideos
4 жыл бұрын
Ian, Helpful/accurate chart? Compares UTR, NTRP, junior, college, pros. cdn.myutr.com/public/media/UTR_Player_Range.pdf Some fun comparisons: middle 4.5 men = 7.25 UTR = high sectional girls 14, low sectional girls 18, high sectional boys 14, low/mid national girls 12s, mid/high college women D2.
@dadsfreetimeclassicgaming1220
4 жыл бұрын
Well done. This is more comprehensive than it looks lol.
@mjnm6748
4 жыл бұрын
What do call this player? kzitem.info/news/bejne/yqBvmpWko6GhYIo
@EP-336
4 жыл бұрын
@@mjnm6748 a genius
@aounjafarey1036
3 жыл бұрын
the area definitely matters! I've most played in the NY/NJ area and 4.0 here is closer to 4.5 in the midwest, was in metro detroit for a bit and I bageled a couple of computer ranked 4.0s, I do not expect to be able to do that in the NY area.
@shimassi9961
4 жыл бұрын
For those that dont know: GOAT is a type of animal, a bit like a sheep
@Dodge2
4 жыл бұрын
Nice one
@flieger3296
4 жыл бұрын
here you go for those who need an official definition: a hardy domesticated ruminant animal that has backward curving horns and (in the male) a beard. It is kept for its milk and meat and is noted for its lively and frisky behavior.
@Richard_on_the_Road
4 жыл бұрын
Well played, would you consider this a "counter-punch"?
@SJ-di5zu
4 жыл бұрын
Theyre also surprisingly good at tennis
@alanfrost75
4 жыл бұрын
@@SJ-di5zu Also other sports too!
@my240sx2
4 жыл бұрын
GOAT: Greatest Of All Trolls
@jeffvalenzona3811
4 жыл бұрын
hahahahhahahahahahhahah
@jmn4276
4 жыл бұрын
Greatest of all time For anyone who wants to know the actual meaning
@icebear326
3 жыл бұрын
@@jmn4276 this is what I came to the comments for lol. I knew what GOAT meant, I just wanted to see if anyone actually did comment what it meant
@yeetlord7746
3 жыл бұрын
U are a troll
@bradenchou7338
3 жыл бұрын
GOAT self-referencing troll post!
@raymccrory6493
4 жыл бұрын
As a previously unaware, now self-identified 3.0/3.5 troll, this video was the most useful, the most practical, the best-10-minutes-that-will-help-me-finally-move-up-the-ratings video I could have ever watched. Pure knowledge. I will continue to love that one-out-of-five winners that feel so good-but I am so much more consciously aware now of the need to “work” at improving my consistency (as an active tactic, rather than a hopeful by-product of just “getting better” at my shot making.) In a nutshell, best tennis video EVER produced. Thank you, sincerely.
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
WOW, that's an amazing comment!! So happy to hear this resonated with you, Dr. McCrory. Kudos to you for your self reflection!
@darrengarside1012
8 ай бұрын
I completely agree. I return to this video at least once a year and am slowly, slowly moving from Troll to Net Rusher.
@Ziamilis
4 жыл бұрын
Troll: “Ugh, my no look down the line backhand is off today. What an unforced error”
@Eliath1984
4 жыл бұрын
my 360 no scope tweener still works though
@ericshine1
4 жыл бұрын
Hahahaha!
@ericshine1
4 жыл бұрын
@@Eliath1984 Too funny!
@cancersilver9546
3 жыл бұрын
*finally makes the low percent shot* Troll: COME ONNNNN!!! Me: nice shot. 40-15 , 1st serve
@martyblack9582
4 жыл бұрын
Very good video and quite accurate too! Two years ago I played a doubles match at the USTA Nationals (Senior Men, 9.0 level), and my partner and I, who were both solid 4.5's lost to a team from Nor Cal 6-1, 6-2. It was my worst loss at Nationals in over 20 matches. But afterward, I looked up our opponents on the UTR website and found both had ratings of 9+. So, we really played against two 5.0 sandbaggers! I think UTR will be good for tennis since NTRP ratings can be wildly inaccurate.
@Naomi-gr7fm
4 жыл бұрын
I think another thing is NTRP seems to vary based on region. I'd assume rankings in the Midwest where tennis is harder year-around would present differently in warmer places like Cali' or Florida. I think UTR is an amazing metric. I'm still new to playing in the system, but I see where it has its advantages.
@ChadSkeeters
4 жыл бұрын
I think you could have given a second label for the Troll Zone of Weapon Developer. This would encompass players that are working on winning points by being offensive but are still learning the technique and strategy required to be either an Aggressive Baseliner or a Net Rusher/All Court player. I'm a 4.0 player that has worked through this zone and can beat many players with an All Court approach as a result. I love playing pushers because it tests my offense and tactics.
@bousemaster3989
3 жыл бұрын
Excellent comments, I am the same and feel that troll zone label is a bit much of misinformation. How can you become aggressive baseliner without trying to do some winning shots.
@chuckharris4855
3 жыл бұрын
I think it would have been nice if he talked about serves. A big serve alone can really help you win matches. I have known to be a little too inconsistent (rallying) if i don't play all the time but my serve usually helps me be competitive.
@ST-ek6lf
2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic point. Absolutely right. Below 5.0 level, we must develop weapons by making mistakes and trying . It means you sometimes have to act like trolls. Just because you make bunch of mistakes, it doesn’t necessarily mean you are automatically trolls. The same thing could be said about pushers. Mybe former trolls are working on getting the balls back in. Ideally, you have to be trolls and pushers at the same time in different period of your player’s life. Then eventually you become a 5.0 and above. At 5.0 level, you can act like pushers and trolls at the same time in the same game or even in the same point.
@stevek1716
2 жыл бұрын
I fit into Ian’s “Troll Zone” area as a high level 4.0 (consistency is what’s preventing me from moving up to 4.5). I refer to folks in this zone as “ball crushers” highlighting the less frequent positives and removing the more frequent negative inconsistencies. I like “weapons developer” because that’s a great description! Sharpening skills (closing volleys, kick serves, poaching, etc) while making a ton of unforced errors to compete at the next level.
@DJ_Cub
2 жыл бұрын
I’m gonna troll zone you Chad Skeeters. That is the greatest white guy name ever
@cinema927
4 жыл бұрын
Fun video. For many of us that are doubles players, there are more classifications. There is a huge difference between those that have multiple types of serves (first and second, power and spin, consistent serving box targets) and can communicate before and during each point so that they run plays, as well as playing out of different formation (I, Australian) and changing tactics mid-match. In CA, where I play, the difference between 6.0 and 7.0 tennis is mostly seen in footwork/court positioning and ability to volley (particularly backhand volleys). 7.5-8.5 doubles sees a massive improvement in serving, court positioning, the return of serve, and communication. A mediocre 7.5 team beats a great 6.0 team 6-0, 6-0.
@nikol7951
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Ian, well said, I agree! I'm at the 4.0 level now, and realize I need to develop more of my offense to take it to the next level. Year ago I was too aggressive and not consistent enough, so I really worked on my consistency and made progress. Now I'm working on being more strategically aggressive and offensive, while maintaining my consistency; realizing I will make more mistakes and that's OK if I want to get better.
@lewisfrancis7203
4 жыл бұрын
GOAT : Greatest Of All Time
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
🔥
@avolox
4 жыл бұрын
You mean Tom Brady
@vaughnlee1
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks
@avolox
4 жыл бұрын
Or...Not Lebron. Sorry my joke selection is just as bad as my shot selection.
@arandomguy21
4 жыл бұрын
What are y'all talking about. Tha Goat is Bernard Tomic
@Naomi-gr7fm
4 жыл бұрын
I admittedly entered and played a lot of college in the "Troll Zone." 🥴 Super appreciative our coach hammered needing to work on my consistency bc that's what won or lost a lot of matches at that level. Was a FRUSTRATING process, but I love every challenge to improve. Consistency is also heavily predicated on fitness! If you gas out easily after a long rally, impatience is more common. I have always been a sprinter type. Nearly no ball goes unretrieved if I have to make a quick dash. Our coach really improved our team's endurance (crack it up to that military training 🥴) though which definitely helped in the marathon matches I often found myself in. (Ironically enough, I theorized and was diagnosed with exercise induced asthma my senior year of college too so I was fighting two battles. For a long time I thought it was normal)! My serve and BH are my weapons, but weapons don't matter if you can't keep the ball IN so you aren't consistently giving away free points. My close friend and classmate used to FRUSTRATE me to no end as she is a textbook pusher and won a lot of matches at her position with that style of play. Challenge matches against her used to spike my anxiety! My consistency and shot selection developed exponentially in the latter half of my college career and I was able to finally beat her. For me, a lot of it was needing CONTROLLED aggression to set myself up. Eventually, I wasn't getting frustrated and just playing my pusher friend's game letting her wait for my errors. I'm now more apt to playing offensively smart with better margin. The mindset you take to pushers is extremely important in your development. They ARE legitimate players whether you think it's "real tennis" or not. If you are losing to them, give them their respect. They have just as much ability to expose deficiencies in your game irregardless of where their level caps.
@bobschroyer4347
4 жыл бұрын
Nice description of Tennis ratings & playing styles -- Offense vs Consistency. I've seen this over the years of my playing but never thought of this concept. Good job
@linguaEpassione
4 жыл бұрын
I'm 2 minutes into the video and I'm already lovin' it! :D I mean, the goat and the galaxy!!! You simply rock... Keep up the great work
@EssentialTennis
3 жыл бұрын
❤🙏
@davidcobo3260
4 жыл бұрын
I really like the way that you simplify the two aspects of tennis play: consistency and offense. It is not about good or bad. It is about understanding choice. For real growth you need to develop both. Underlying your thesis is non judgement. It is about understanding where one is and how you would assess others.
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
Exactly!! Really well said, David.
@raymccrory6493
4 жыл бұрын
That’s really a beautiful paraphrasing of the point if the video. Nice job!
@miapapa1955
3 жыл бұрын
I have a better understanding of rating a player or when a player states there rating. Thanks
@EssentialTennis
3 жыл бұрын
glad to help!
@ranjanjha1044
5 ай бұрын
This is EXCELLENT. I am a new player (started only about 2-3years ago) and I have been encountering all these kind of players in the local circuit….. and I myself have been thinking about my own game and this chart sums it up so perfectly in what I see in others and myself. WELL DONE!!
@kevincywu999
4 жыл бұрын
Hi Ian, so glad you did this video. It really reaffirms what I have been telling my daughter and as always it is more pleasant to hear from someone else beside the parents per my daughter point of view. My daughter is playing advance competitive tennis at age 12 and she is getting up to the 4.5 - 5.0 UTR and I consistently tell her she needs to have a balance of offensive and defensive 50/50 if she wants to continue to grow in her development. she is a very consistent player so aka “pusher” and now aka “counter puncher” as her UTR climbs. I inform her she needs to continue to work on her net play and also develop a “consistent” offensive tools which fits her style. Just a shot out to “feel tennis” video series which I love by the way to develop what feels naturally, don’t force it and try to become something you are not.
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful, Kevin. Hope she enjoys it as well!
@andrewlee5853
4 жыл бұрын
If your daughter is 12 with a 4.5 UTR, she must be excellent already!
@proob8171
3 жыл бұрын
@@andrewlee5853 4.5 utr isn’t that good chief when I was twelve I was 6.2
@uchihasasuke7436
3 жыл бұрын
@@proob8171 wow you're so amazing!!! can i get your autograph!!??? /s
@gusthedog
2 жыл бұрын
@@uchihasasuke7436 hahaha
@coreyleventhal3694
4 жыл бұрын
GOAT= Greatly Outstanding At Tennis
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
🐐
@MrRockrobstr
3 жыл бұрын
That universe analogy is perfect. Many years ago I played some guys headed for that zone…a couple who went on to play on tour, and it’s like you’re not even on the same court with them.
@shouryanadda9604
4 жыл бұрын
Best tennis channel on KZitem..... Good luck bro
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
🙏❤
@citiofbrass
4 жыл бұрын
More vids like this pls. You don't see this anywhere else. This was awesome. Thanks Ian!
@malatestov
4 жыл бұрын
Great video. An Spanish Pusher here, working my way to the centerline thanks to your videos, among other channels 😉 Great topic. Last week I had a bad experience with a friend of mine, who is in the Troll Zone. I won. He blamed me for loosing, said mean comments about my stile of playing and hurt my feelings. He did not shook hands at the end nor apologized. I won't play with him anymore, unless he changes his attitude. Yesterday I played with other friend, who is way better than me. I stayed more balance between offence and consistency, and although I lost, enjoyed the match much more. Than you for your videos and keep up with this quality content.
@tonycella1395
4 жыл бұрын
Al primer "amigo" lo mandaba yo a esparragar. Cualquiera que te critique después de perder no tiene la menor noción de lo que es la deportividad. En el tenis y en la vida hay que saber encajar las derrotas. Un saludo
@malatestov
4 жыл бұрын
@@tonycella1395 Yo no lo hubiera expresado mejor. Tengo la esperanza de que cambie de actitud, pero mientras tanto, que se busque otros contrincantes. Muchas gracias por tu respuesta!
@tonycella1395
4 жыл бұрын
@@malatestov El curso de singles de Ian me ha ayudado un montón a la hora de establecer patrones de juego efectivos y minimizar los errores. No sé si lo habrás visto, pero te aseguro de que las estrategias que enseña te ayudarían ante cualquier oponente. ¡Mucha suerte, y que sigas disfrutando del tenis!
@malatestov
4 жыл бұрын
@@tonycella1395 Lo buscaré, seguro que me es útil, muchas gracias!
@tonylasala
4 жыл бұрын
Great video. After playing for almost 35 years, I’ve finally realized that good form is the key to having a “pusher” mentality AND still hanging with aggressive baseliners. Now, of course, there’s a difference between realizing it and actually making it happen!
@DavidTsung
4 жыл бұрын
Another way to describe Troll Zoners is: Terrible tennis partner.
@info781
4 жыл бұрын
Two Troll Zoners can have fun playing together as long as they have 10-20 balls on the court.
@mikeobiwon
4 жыл бұрын
Another awesome video. I think your "scientific" breakdown is pretty accurate based on my league and tournament experiences. I know I used to be more in the troll zone until realizing that I wasn't winning a lot of matches this way. Keep up the great work and I look forward to seeing your next video!
@CodySharp82
4 жыл бұрын
This is fantastic stuff. I've been a 3.5-4.0 Trollish type player (though I'm not one to complain about the other players - I just get angry at myself) but have worked really hard the last 6 months to move towards the center line/more consistency. Also, I find ratings hard due to certain aspects of my game being so much different - my serve is as good as most 5-5.5 guys I see and my forehand is probably a 4.5 or so. My backhand is probably a 2 or 2.5 and my fitness is a 3. Average it all out and I'm a 3.5-4.0 player.
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
Great to hear your thoughts, Cody!
@stevenbuxton4459
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Ian. I know we all remember that awesome blasting forehand we hit in the tiny corner that one time to win a match. But real development does come from missing those shots and finding better results winning the points 2 ft from the alley. Hence... Consistency. Why then do I love to blast the forehand into the tiny corner? 🙂
@Wannabe-Pro
4 жыл бұрын
I once bowled a strike. Dang, I can’t understand why I’ve never bowled a 300. Another great video @ET
@tmass1
3 жыл бұрын
ok no imagine only going for 1 or 2 pins. that's a pusher
@b.lakeberg7456
3 жыл бұрын
This video was fun. At times, I switched between being a troll (minus making fun of other players playing style) and pusher. It was fun and it made my opponent frustrated. They did not know which player was going to show up. I have abandoned the "chaotic" player type to develop my game more comprehensively. When I am not winning or playing well, I will try to reduce errors and give my "on fire" opponent little to work with to see if they can continue to play at their high level.
@michaelboyko5024
2 жыл бұрын
I've watched the video several times so that not to miss any details and in one moment it came to me that this can be converted into a week time on court line, so that's definitely a sound table.
@lptevadog
4 жыл бұрын
I've always told my players that, "in general" a higher rated player should beat the next lower level 6-1 or 6-2. While USTA keeps a lid on their "special formula" for determining movement after matches are recorded, this "formulae" seems to work when players are wondering why they did or did get moved up or down when the new ratings come out in November. Thanks for your explanation - It made a lot of sense.
@jimsichterman4684
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Ian, UTR is very confusing and can have wild swing from match to match. In one match I moved from 6.33 down to 5.96 even though the UTR chart showed my level for that match at 9.0 which while I would love to play at the level is not accurate. In NTRP I'm a high level 4.0 player.
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
Wow, that's crazy. It's so confusing!
@YonghyunJohnKim
4 жыл бұрын
My understanding of UTR is that it is not just dependent on the ultimate outcome of the match (win vs loss). Rather, it is more dependent on how competitive the match was, measured by % games won vs % games lost. For example, my rating would not change much if I won 7-6, 7-6 as opposed to winning 6-1, 6-1. Plus, there are other variables that come into play in calculating the rating (how many matches played in the last 12 months, the rating of your opponent, whether it's a full 6-game set vs 4-game set vs pro-set, etc)
@jeffhermida4788
3 жыл бұрын
thanks for this!! Not many USTA New England tournaments right now but a whole bunch of UTR available. Was racking my brain how UTR is classified. thanks again.
@EssentialTennis
3 жыл бұрын
Glad to help!
@rhmerkin
3 жыл бұрын
Instead of Trolls, I've always referred to *those* players as Loose Cannons. Great video, loved the galaxy between 5.0 and GOAT
@tennisbuddys
2 жыл бұрын
Love this video, thank you! This will be great for my tennis program. Especially teaching the adults as they just start playing leagues but many feel like they are already a 4.5 because they have watched so many youtube videos yet lacking in the very basic techniques, control, consistency to begin with:) These are the players who struggle the most and get stuck and start having less fun. Great content very helpful to explain to students in all categories and age level!
@mikecbrblue
4 жыл бұрын
Great description of the levels.. makes me think about my own game and when i play different styles. Loving your work.
@MarkSansait
4 жыл бұрын
Is it bad that I'm hovering at the 9UTR and still a 4.5 NTRP? Of course not because USTA is really, really convoluted with their rating system. (UTR isnt perfect, but its much better for gauging singles performance.... doubles is another story.) I am loving Ian calling out the keyboard warriors - gotto get the trolls out of their caves. Love this analysis Ian!
@WalkerKlondyke
4 жыл бұрын
Can't wait to see your match with Ben/MEP! Looking forward to the insight shared between games.
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
I'm super excited about it as well!
@BO_LT_tennis
4 жыл бұрын
More or less it's a very precise description. I am a counter pusher I guess. And I do my own similar tennis channel for dabblers in Russian where I try to describe the same topics, so those who speak Russian can watch it too. Your manner of explaining is perfect. It can't be better! thanx! Keep doing it!
@johnnybgood1169
4 жыл бұрын
I feel that UTR will ultimately replace NTRP in the US because the algorithm underlying it fully prioritizes match results (wins and losses) as well as the strength of the opposition. NTRP has always put too much emphasis (at least in my experience) on technical ability.
@laurent9752
3 жыл бұрын
@@MichaelDarlingCo I am confused. NTPR take in account the number of game win ? I thougt that was UTR. I though NTPR use the number of games only to control that you are in the right division.
@Naomi-gr7fm
4 жыл бұрын
Also, loving the content! 2020 has really been this Channel's year in terms of quality and production. Hope that ankle is recovering well and feeling better, Ian! 🦶
@dorothieedinger8438
4 жыл бұрын
After playing doubles many years in the USTA, I found that ratings could depend a lot on whoever your partner was -and that could depend on the captain of the team. If one was a high 3.0 and played with a new 2.5 or 3.0 with no wins, that could keep your rating stagnant no matter how well you played. Ironically, the USTA player guidelines puts me at the 3.5 level which I have been at previously. Playing up a level to experience what you may need to improve is not an option as it once was.
@stilllifeproductions5017
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this! Notice also, the lack of the technical aspects in the lower level players featured, as well as the little bad habits like not using the non-racket hand in ready position, etc...
@EssentialTennis
3 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it, Still Life!
@shootin_quickgg1559
2 жыл бұрын
I I was a college tennis player at I would say a 5.0+ level. I took the aggression/troll tennis style I had and channeled it into a more consistent ball. This brought me over the 4.5+ hump I was stuck at. What this video doesn’t tell you is that going from one level to another is a huge gap. The earlier ratings are easy. Once you reach 6.5 and higher, it becomes incredibly difficult to “level up” your rating. At my peak, I was rated a 9.78 (I really wanted that 10.0 rating 😢) and within a 4 year span I only changed from my starting rating of 8.89. For a 4 year span, I only increased a little under 1 level. The great thing about tennis is that everyone is able to get to the level they desire to be at, just takes a lot of work.
@philiprobbins6200
4 жыл бұрын
Excellent video. Ian's remarks on the "troll zone" mentality (prevalent among "keyboard warriors") are spot-on. Good players strike the right balance between consistency and offense. Aggressive players don't criticize an opponent's more defensive (consistency-oriented) playing style when they lose; instead, they try to improve their own consistency.
@elunsford61
4 жыл бұрын
Great job, Ian! Very well analyzed and common sense approach to your describing the different style of play. Well done, Coach!
@biohacks3156
3 жыл бұрын
Where you nailed it is the mindset aspect. The actual consistency depends on the ball you are getting, a 5.0 "troll" would be able to hit back forever against a 3.0 pusher , and a 5.0 pusher would instinctively fall into the right tactical pattern giving deadly attacks against a 3.0 troll. What differentiates us is what we enjoy in the game : long rallies versus improbable shots. I'd argue that a troll gets more of a kick when he misses frequently, because it raises the subjective value of the few successful shots; conversely a pusher will be disappointed at the accidental winner that deprives him from winning the point with pure grit. May I suggest another dimension of classification : perfect execution versus creativity -- the Djoko v.s Fed axis. Or Borg vs. McEnroe, for my gen ;)
@SquatLife
4 жыл бұрын
Great model. Love the Troll Zone. I wonder if aggressive baseliner would be more in the center around your NTRP 4.5-5.0, kind of like a Venn diagram between counter-puncher and net rusher.
@miguelbarahona6636
4 жыл бұрын
1:40. For those who are searching: GOAT: any of various hollow-horned ruminant mammals (especially of the genus Capra) related to the sheep but of lighter build and with backwardly arching horns, a short tail, and usually straight hair.
@seanlangille9667
4 жыл бұрын
I had this realization a few years ago (the tradeoffs between offense and consistency, especially at the NTRP 3.5-4.0 level) and noticed how many points/games/sets I was losing due to poor shot selection and over-enjoyment of that temporary rush from hitting a crazy winner. Improving my shot selection (and consequently my consistency) made a huge difference in the total number of matches won - I went from streaky winning and streaky losing to more consistent wins. I'm working to tune my offense more now - I play primarily against NTRP 4.5 guys (UTR 7-9 range) and consistency alone is tough to win points with, unless you have world-class conditioning and speed. Picking those spots to move forward and finish at the net seems absolutely critical, regardless of playstyle, if you want to win at 4.5 league matches/tournaments.
@AcingTennis
4 жыл бұрын
I'm a huge fan of the UTR system. Wish it was all we used. The difference in each NTRP category is HUGEEEE. And I like the idea of putting women and men in the same rating system so they can compete against each other. Not to mention the incentive to lose to not go up in rating in NTRP... Each match and each game matters in UTR and changes constantly to keep you accurately rated - love it. Also LOL @ "Goat Zone"
@ugvlogs.7730
4 жыл бұрын
love your videos I've improved a lot after watching them
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
So happy to hear that!
@thomasmedeiros5722
3 жыл бұрын
In my experience over 40 years of playing and coaching many players reach a plateau or ceiling and never advance. At the lower rating it relatively easier to improve. However many players do not have the drive, interest or time to train and practice. You have to be willing to change your game and improve skills. Many 4.0 players just hit the same mediocre backhand or serve and play the same players year after year. Personally at the 4.5 level I spent two seasons working with a coach on my serve and volley game. The work paid dividends because I developed the skills to play all court offense and defense tennis. I was fortunate to have skilled hitting partners to practice with so the more you hit with these guys the more you improve.
@dannasteinberg4696
4 жыл бұрын
To defend the troll (I was one), and I did quite well as a troll. LOL At least we are developing our weapons!!!
@Murmurrr
3 жыл бұрын
life is too short to be a pusher
@gab_ale
Жыл бұрын
That galaxy between the 5.0 and the Pros is the most realistic depiction I have seen of that gap.
@tennisforgood
4 жыл бұрын
Hi Ian. Fun video. I'm a club-champion level player (mid-to-high 4.5) and I have been known to fantasize about a hitting session with the GOAT. I just went out with a fellow teaching pro and we probably hit 100 balls back and forth without an error in an early rally. Solid ball-striking, not pushing. People watching were probably impressed; hell, I was! I totally agree that a galaxy separates me from the 7.0-level players. But what precisely makes them that order of magnitude better? Their foot speed? Their technique? Their weight of shot? All of the above? How much would Federer have to ramp it down to have a friendly knockabout (just rallying) with the likes of me? I want to see past the galaxy beyond watching clips on KZitem.
@rsmith02
2 жыл бұрын
This was great and the conclusion I came to after playing college tennis. I'd never get to the next level (as an attacking/net rushing player) without rebuilding my game around a more consistent core. I started to take pace off and get more selective about my shots and switched to a racquet that would also reward this type of play in the long run. I hope to keep to the middle of the path!
@juliansanderson839
4 жыл бұрын
One thing I noticed was the closer a player is to the 50/50 line, (at every level) the harder it is for them to improve. I think this is because of two reasons: When you’re a ten on one front and a one in the other, what you need to improve upon is very easy to see. However, the closer you are to the line. The harder it is to see what exactly you need to work upon. If your offensive shots are consistent and your consistent shots are offensive, it can hard to tell which to work on. And when your right on the line, there is a level of indecisiveness. Movement on the graph happens in steps, you go right one, you go up one or vise versea. You can’t work on consistency and offensive at the same time. Improvement when you are close to the line means to to actively choose to perform worse in some capacity.
@carseye1219
4 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed this! As someone who also coaches another sport, I was immediately able to place individuals into those categories. Also, as an older dude, I see many more "perfectionists" in kids than I used to. They feel they are judged by every result of every point. My first tennis coach would say things like "that was the right choice of shot but you needed to play it with more margin". Kids don't understand things like that now. They are only interested in "did I win the point?". Hence, more pushers. I am going to try to make them let their "inner troll" out to play more.
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
Love it! Thanks for posting your thoughts, great stuff.
@redrocklead
4 жыл бұрын
Tennis and golf are not good for perfectionist. I recommend bowling, darts, pool, and horseshoes for those seeking attainable perfection. It might be a coincidence these sports are also ones where alcohol is oft consumed actively by those attaining perfection.
@carseye1219
4 жыл бұрын
@@redrocklead My post was a little clumsily worded. I should have put it that modern kids are less "process" and more "result" oriented. Things like "don't try to actually learn this material but do this and you'll get a high SAT score".
@redrocklead
4 жыл бұрын
@@carseye1219 I buy that. I coached lax and when new players were successful I often say how did that feel? I would say try to hit the pass, shot, scoop whatever and get that feeling again rather than breakdown technique good or bad.
@icebear326
3 жыл бұрын
That's very true. Many kids in 14 and under that are around 10-11 UTR are way more on the consistency side. They have super long rallies of simply slicing a bunch of high percentage shots so that they don't lose the point. This will go on for a really long time until someone finally ends up giving the point up, somehow missing, or finding a way to get to the net very safely to put it away
@gretchenlittle6817
4 жыл бұрын
My only criticism is the title -- I guess I thought you'd explain how ratings work, as in how they're calculated. As far as examining different styles of play, I think you're spot on. I will always be more offensive minded personally, mostly because when I started playing I was overweight and couldn't last in long rallies -- no winner, no point. Strangely enough in my 40s I finally got my weight under control and now use agility to my advantage, but I still do it with an offensive mindset. At the recreational level I think if you want to be a quality "consistency" player you have to work harder on your fitness and conditioning, because without those you're sunk. A really solid ball striker can still win rec level matches, even if they're not as fit.
@rajjoshi1111
3 жыл бұрын
Nice explanation. I got some understanding about my level after watching this video. I think, all the amateur club level players should watch this video for self assessment and for getting ideas for personal tennis skill development. Great work man !!
@2ddw
4 жыл бұрын
I would argue for a couple of changes to the diagram: 1)The vertical line separating the Aggressive Baseliner and the Troll Zone should run vertically down as it does now and then curve and become asymptotic to the upper blue angled line. The argument here is that even at the lower levels I find players trying to hit aggressively from the baseline and at even lower levels it is bonk with aggressive placement 2) Mirror image on the horizontal line separating counter puncher and pusher. I think it is also more realistic if the horizontal and vertical axes are actually a log scale. I observed that with many juniors starting development of their game, they fall into two categories: a) consistent pusher with soft balls b) inconsistent hard hitter. Those who eventually achieve *both* - usually around 15-16 yrs - can then go on to be really good.
@dalesalmon1028
Жыл бұрын
Great video had a conversation with one of my tennis peers tonight! He is defiantly a troll all the way we’re I crossed the line and have gravitated more to the consistency side. I’m now on the threshold of being a 4.5 player and he still stuck at a 3.5 5 years latter. I try to convince him to incorporate some topspin and understand that the three p’s off percentages(balls in play) where the 3.5 hit their provincial wall. Placement( hitting your target areas and playing patterns) 4.0 and last pace 4.5 and above( hitting down the line or deep down the middle. To many players(like him) tackle it with pace first! Even if you meant this to be a big ha ha I hope some my take it constructively if they truly want to be a better player!
@michaelboyko5024
2 жыл бұрын
This was the best video lesson of the century! To make such a close look on tennis gameplay theory is really professionally profound and solid! P.S. I'm a troll, definitely... :)
@littleguylearns816
9 ай бұрын
As someone who is coming back to tennis I loved this so much!
@avinashdalal716
4 жыл бұрын
Great video. I’ve been looking for this type of breakdown. Many thanks! It would be interesting to breakdown the features of consistency and of offense. Then for each feature, how a tennis player can inspect their game to quantify their performance in that feature. Ultimately this would give the rating. If there is enough data of players then the tram lines can be formed! Just sayin...
@ConMan
3 жыл бұрын
One question I have is about the comparison of NTRP vs. UTR. I recently found on the USTA website that they have a sort of conversion chart, and it showed that 4.0 Women to be about 4 - 6 on the UTR, and 4.0 Men to be about 6 - 8 on the UTR. I'm a 4.0 guy, so I'm just curious where you got the 4.5 - 6 on UTR. Also, I hear some guys say that 4.0 in some areas are better than 4.0 in other areas, so I'm curious if you have any thoughts on that as well.
@sunshine1days342
4 жыл бұрын
I would also add footwork onto it. I think speed and agility are important too. I liked this.
@Tennisbull-match-statistics
4 жыл бұрын
I wonder if fast guys tend to be pushers?
@sunshine1days342
4 жыл бұрын
@@Tennisbull-match-statistics I don't know...some? I know I counter punch, but my feet are slow! Yikes!
@peterdrury5627
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this--puts the different aspects of our sport in perspective.
@EssentialTennis
3 жыл бұрын
Our pleasure!
@Dom-yv4nq
4 жыл бұрын
In short, I'd urge persons to not "self-evaluate" but rather have themselves assessed by someone knowledgeable in the game, preferably at your club or place of play. I say at your club because as Ian accurately states, ratings shift from place to place. At one club I was a 4.5, at another I was assessed as a 5.0. I didn't think either assessment of me was wrong either. The 4.5 club had some really strong players.
@evanc.2382
4 жыл бұрын
Hahaha....love how you were holding your laughter...lol. Im using this to explain to my "not tennis" people. I really loved the idea of the "universe" between goat and amateur. I'm too old to get into space...lol. Btw...I'm a mix of counter (every defense shot is an attack) and net guy (approach to finish points soon --- either way they may go).
@grucacious
4 жыл бұрын
Love the analysis! I definitely feel like I used to be more of a pusher, but I'm working on my offensive side. Hoping to film myself for the first time tomorrow in a friendly game, so not much looking forward to watching that back!
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
YES! Good for you, Neil! You're going to learn so much about yourself.
@johnnieblackwell
4 жыл бұрын
Just curious as to why you didn't conclude your graphs with the very top numbers (7.0 NTRP/16.5 UTR), for more context. That would have been informative.
@Duguro
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this, I enjoy the rating breakdown and differences between aggression and consistency. Is there a similar breakdown for doubles. You'll have more variables with having partner matchups and playstyles but there are often differences in opinion on more ideal team lineups. Two aggressive players vs two consistent or one aggression and one consistent. The doubles game has changes so much and going between one up and one back vs both up keeps changing. I'd love more videos on doubles tactics and strategy in the mix. Thank you for what you do, all the best.
@tensaijuusan4653
3 жыл бұрын
This video was very interesting and also entertaining - good job Ian. What you have to say about the "trolls" is so true. I am a 65 year old left handed "pusher" with counter punch abilities and nothing pleases me more when a tennis "troll" with faster and more powerful shots than me eventually gets annoyed and frustrated when he or she loses and then makes some absurd accusation. Hahaha.
@FootFaultTennis
4 жыл бұрын
Just to be clear, 'super scientific' 😂. Definately used to be in the troll zone, now i would say i'm an aggressive baseliner, i guess a mid 2000's Federer type, able to be defensive, and able to come to the net, but prefer the aggression from the baseline.
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
Good for you, Foot Fault! Way to work on your attitude and outlook on the game.
@FootFaultTennis
4 жыл бұрын
@@EssentialTennis Thanks, i've certainly changed from a 'hit a winner or UE' to a 'set the point up and wait for the opportunity' type of player. Completely changing my technqiue on forehand and serve to help with the consistency also.
@SomeoneYouKnow2671
4 жыл бұрын
I think I fall into the same category, altough my net game still needs some improvement
@FootFaultTennis
4 жыл бұрын
@@SomeoneYouKnow2671 I'm quite lucky, I have quite a big serve compared to my height, so i often don't need to do too much work when at the net.
@markoshun
3 жыл бұрын
One offensive strategy that often gets over-looked in the pusher/counter-puncher category is the strategy of making the other person hit uncomfortable shots by using spins, variety, and placement rather than going for 'winners', like hitting a 1st volley at their feet rather than the back corner.
@EssentialTennis
3 жыл бұрын
🙏🏽
@commondirtbagz7130
3 жыл бұрын
I’m not gonna lie, you’re explanation of why pushing isn’t bad really changed my view on tennis as a whole and made me a better player. With that in mind it made this scale make a lot more sense.
@stevlehr
4 жыл бұрын
When I regularly played NTRP tournaments, I tried to rate in the warm up the consistency of my opponent, compared to my own consistency. If I believed I was more consistent, I went for that, even if it meant a long match. If he seemed more consistent, I shortened points. I played a 4.0 mixed doubles event with a woman (Hi Cheri!) I had known for a couple years but never played with. Before our first round, she told me she would be the consistent partner who set me up to hit winners. That worked - we won the event in four rounds on a weekend. She had been my team captain a year or so earlier.
@elcherry
4 жыл бұрын
I think that's a good strategy. Just like in poker - if the table is aggressive, play tight; if the table is tight, play aggressive.
@blackhawkcourt
3 жыл бұрын
LOL....so your over explaining TROLL zone...but wont explain to the uncles what a G.O.A.T is.... love this dude...I’m subscribing!!
@johnnyblackrants7625
3 жыл бұрын
This is interesting. It's definitely not universal across areas. In my area, the solid 4.5s tend to be utr 8.x's, and the top 4.5s tend to be UTR 9s. Even in our local USTA leagues, a UTR 7 would get absolutely crushed if they played 1 singles against a good 4.5 team, and all of the 1st Singles players on the good 4.0 teams are UTR 7s, or high 6s.
@larrymorritt
8 ай бұрын
Loved this! Great work!
@rishinatarajan2887
4 жыл бұрын
I'm a 4.5 NTPR, probably because a rounded 6 for utr. But I am probably on the line that us towards the offensive side, but I am decently consistent, to a point where if I play a consistent player, when they hit a short ball I just hit a really good approach shot, at least I would say.
@MarcoSolidx
4 жыл бұрын
Great video, One suggestion tough; I know NTRP ranks based on your wins and vary depending where you play; but you could do a video showing a example of a regular 3.0; 3,5; 4... what set of skills one generally have. Also I got a question, if a player moved to USA and never have played a usta/ntrp match and want to play a amateur tournament, how’s gonna be his rating to have even matches?
@EssentialTennis
4 жыл бұрын
Great suggestions, Brandon!
@yourbroadrian7133
4 жыл бұрын
In germany we have Lk levels from 1-25, 1 being in the top 700 or so in germany so there's even more range and I find it fun to have those levels as sort of a point of orientation towards my own level and obviously it's fun trying to climb it since it feels pretty much like leveling up in a game but on the other hand you also shouldn't pay too much attention on that because it's not accurate especially in lower levels and there's a lot of factors that come into play. What I'm trying to say is have fun and work hard regardless of your current level.
@user-vk9uu1rz1k
4 жыл бұрын
I really love this video. Finally got a bit of an explanation.
@thelifeexamined
4 жыл бұрын
Suggestion for your inevitable follow-up video: Make more scientific overlay and possibly less categorical: average serve or groundstroke speed vs percentage success. For example: 115mph first serve and 75% first serves in is balanced at say 4.5 level. Drop to 3.5 player 110 mph at 55% rate is more (too?) offensive. Or 3.5 player 80mph at 90% is more (too?) defensive. Could specify forehands as % successful placement within 3ft diameter circle on court at say 60mph. Then map to how that results in winning or not winning the point (and ultimately a match) by number balls hit in each rally depending on the style of your opponent if you don't adjust your game.
@kevinknox1414
4 жыл бұрын
Boy was I waiting to hear what you'd call the troll zone. Great name! That was my whole youth, and I was such an egotist!
@jgwil2
4 жыл бұрын
Hmm, interesting that you put iracer3 (Andrew) on the aggressive baseliner side. I would actually call him more of a counterpuncher: yes, he has very strong groundstrokes that he can hit deep, but he usually wins matches with defense, legs, athleticism rather than aggressive shotmaking from what I've seen.
@Kfm7
2 жыл бұрын
There is a LOT of sandbagging in tournaments to where a 4.5 will play in 3.5 to 4.0 tournaments but the tournaments don’t regulate anything as far as rating goes. And suppose may have a 5.0 forehand but a 3.5 to 4.0 back hand and serve is say average between 90-95 MPH and are decent serve and volliers
@gtelephone
3 жыл бұрын
Awesome video. But how to go from a "consistent" player to more of an "aggressive" player? And few channels mention how to move and where to stand in doubles...
@codenamegrimlock7510
4 жыл бұрын
superb breakdown, really helped with clissifying where my daughter is, do you hae a PDF of the final diagram? so I can show to my daughter please? thank you, keep up the amazing work
@SteveAckley1
4 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed the video. What are your thoughts on UTR “replacing or supplementing” NTPR ratings to help reduce sandbagging and promote level play?
@kingtrawal
3 жыл бұрын
that's the way it should be
@pro71
4 жыл бұрын
Hey Ian, could you do a video on who you deem as the best counter puncher in tennis? What are their attributes? Perhaps even dissect racquet choice and or even their physical abilities (Hewit was really quick) etc. Seems like not a lot of great counter punchers use Wilson racquets (could be a coincidence)... they for some reason lean towards Yonex.
@Dd-wi8bk
4 жыл бұрын
Nice... Definitely a troll here but I am the untroll? More offensive minded but not critical of consistency player's. Actually I'm quite enviously of them and working on it. Another great video Ian and co!!!
@icebear326
3 жыл бұрын
Honestly in juniors you can get to a 5.0+ NTRP or a 8-10+ UTR just by basically pushing. Especially in 12s and 14s. In 16s that style starts to get ruled out because power becomes a bigger factor.
@D_LEGEND
3 жыл бұрын
I like the video, and I especially like that the GOAT was left there for Djokovic as he is the one of the Big 3 that really is right on that line :D
@bradbixel878
2 жыл бұрын
I would argue that the most important attribute in winning tennis is movement (mostly raw speed, but technique, agility, and endurance obviously also factor in here). The 3 goats (on the men's side) also happen to be three of the fastest athletes. I think Lindsay Davenport may be the best ball-striker I ever saw, and she worked to perfect her movement technique and endurance but was limited by a lack of raw speed and agility. Agassi wasn't the fastest guy, but he knew his opponents' patterns so well that he was always moving in the right direction, rarely wrong-footed, and it was almost impossible to hit behind him. All I'm sayin' is if you want to win, get as light, quick, and flexible as you can. When you know you can run all day, that free's you up mentally to find ways to beat "better" players. After all, aren't offense (which I prefer to call ball-quality) and consistency both a function of getting to the ball and being well-balanced?
@icebear326
3 жыл бұрын
Btw the organization of NTRP to UTR only works for men's. Because in women's a 10.5 UTR is like a semi-pro. Whereas in mens a 13 UTR is like a semi-pro
@albertleines1149
3 жыл бұрын
I was at the troll zone for 2 years. I use to hit super hard and not improve. Now I'm pusher and net rusher. I'm learning more about it rather than just playing.
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