The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Aussie Open to use 10-point tiebreaker­s

Each ‘Slam’ now has its own format for deciding deadlocks.

- By Ben Rothenberg

Before the curtain rises on the 2019 tennis season, a warning to the audience: The script might be confusing because the directors can’t agree on an ending.

The Australian Open, which begins Jan. 14, announced last week that fifth sets in men’s singles matches and third sets in women’s singles will now conclude with a first-to-10points tiebreaker at 6-6. That means each of the four Grand Slam tournament­s will have a different format for deciding deadlocked matches next year.

The U.S. Open had been the only Grand Slam event to use a tiebreaker in the final set, playing a standard firstto-seven-points tiebreaker at 6-6. In October, Wimbledon decided to add a standard tiebreaker at 12-12 in the final set. The French Open now stands as the only Grand Slam tournament to have players continue to play out the deciding set until one player leads by two games, which was the previous format at Wimbledon and the Australian Open.

Tennis Australia said its decision came after extensive consultati­on with current and former players, commentato­rs, agents and TV analysts. “We went with a 10-point tiebreak at sixgames-all in the final set to ensure the fans still get a special finale to these often epic contests, with the longer tiebreak still then allowing for that one final twist or change of momentum in the contest,” Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley said in a statement. “This longer tiebreak also can lessen some of the serving dominance that can prevail in the shorter tiebreak.”

The surge of reforms to Grand Slam match formats seems to have been spurred by the pair of marathon Wimbledon men’s singles semifinals in July. The first, between Kevin Anderson and John Isner, went to 26-24 in the fifth set and ended after 6 hours, 36 minutes. The semifinal between Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal that followed ended at 10-8 in the fifth set after 5 hours, 15 minutes and needed an extra day to finish. Those enduring semifinals delayed the traditiona­l start of the women’s final.

The tennis scoring system, often difficult for newcomers to the sport to learn, has never had so many variations. They could be seen as charming idiosyncra­sies, like the changing court surfaces across the calendar, or as evidence of growing fractiousn­ess in a sport whose governing bodies frequently fail to find consensus.

ATP Tour events are different still from Grand Slam tournament­s, with all matches being played in a best-of-three-set format instead of the best-of-five format. And then there’s the Davis Cup, which is switching next year from best-of-five matches to best-of-three as part of a radical overhaul to the competitio­n. Davis Cup introduced final-set tiebreaker­s for the first time in 2016.

The Australian Open will be the first tournament to use a 10-point tiebreaker in singles play. It has been frequently used in doubles, where it has replaced a full third set in doubles matches on the ATP and WTA tours, as well as in mixed doubles at the Grand Slam events outside of Wimbledon.

“2018 has been a sledgehamm­er to tennis history and traditions,” retired Australian player Sam Groth wrote on Twitter.

Calls to shorten men’s matches have grown in recent years, especially with many late rounds of Grand Slam events being marred by a player hampered by injury, but there had been little complaint about women’s best-of-three-sets matches. Some of the most memorable matches in women’s tennis this decade have been marathons at the Australian Open. Francesca Schiavone defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova 16-14 in a third set in 2011, and Simona Halep outlasted Lauren Davis 15-13 this year in Melbourne.

Despite the attention given to long matches, they remain outliers. Most players will play only a small handful of extended matches in their careers. Of Serena Williams’ 376 career Grand Slam singles matches, only six have gone beyond 6-6 in the third. Roger Federer has gone beyond 6-6 in the fifth eight times in 393 matches.

Isner has become the poster boy for long matches. His semifinal match against Anderson at Wimbledon this year came eight years after his 11-hour, 5-minute epic against Nicolas Mahut at Wimbledon in 2010, which ended at 70-68 in the fifth. Isner has had a staggering 10.4 percent of his Grand Slam matches go beyond 6-6 in the fifth set.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? John Isner has become the poster boy for long matches. More than 10 percent of his Grand Slam matches have gone beyond 6-6 in the fifth set. Roger Federer has gone beyond 6-6 eight times in 393 matches.
GETTY IMAGES John Isner has become the poster boy for long matches. More than 10 percent of his Grand Slam matches have gone beyond 6-6 in the fifth set. Roger Federer has gone beyond 6-6 eight times in 393 matches.

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