Italian translation at settesei.it
In the first round on Monday, the 23-year-old American Mackenzie McDonald defeated young Russian Andrey Rublev in four sets, 6-4 6-4 2-6 6-4. While Rublev missed part of the 2018 season due to injury and carries a ranking just inside the top 100, the victory still qualifies as a bit of an upset for McDonald, who has never come close to Rublev’s peak of No. 31.
The handful of fans who kept tabs on Court 10 were treated to an unusual display. The American relentlessly attacked Rublev’s second serve, rushing the net behind his return almost two dozen times. Many players don’t hit return approach shots that often in an entire year. What’s more, the tactic worked. Without it, the already close match would have been a coin flip.
By my count, in the log I kept for the Match Charting Project, McDonald came in behind his second serve return 22 times. Approach shot counts are never precise, because when a player hits a winner or an error, he may lean forward as if to continue toward the net, but quickly stop when he realizes it’s unnecessary. To be precise, he came in at least 22 times, and perhaps one more return winner or a couple of return errors should also be added to the total. No matter, the conclusions are similar regardless of whether the number is 22 or 24.
Rublev hit 62 second serves, but 9 of those resulted in double faults, so we’re looking at 53 playable second serves. McDonald netrushed 22 of those, winning 10. Of the other 31, he won only 11. That’s a return winning percentage of 45% on return approaches compared to 35% on other returns. Had he won all of those points at the 35% rate, it would have cost him two, perhaps three points off his overall total. He barely outscored Rublev as it was, 124 points to 118, so every little bit helped.
A rarity in context
The Match Charting Project has shot-by-shot data for nearly 2,000 men’s matches from this decade, and Monday’s four-setter was the first one of those in which a player hit at least 20 second-serve return approaches. (Dustin Brown approached at a higher rate in multiple matches, including his 2015 Wimbledon upset of Rafael Nadal.) There are only ten other matches in the database in which one player hit at least ten such approaches, and Mischa Zverev accounts for three of them. More than three-quarters of the time, the total number of second-serve return approaches is zero.
McDonald is not alone in enjoying some success with the tactic: The 1500 or so second-serve return approaches in the dataset were about 14% more effective than non-approaches in the same matches. However, it’s hard to be sure what that number is telling us, since most players approach so rarely. Some of the attacks are probably on-the-fly decisions against particularly weak serves, not pre-planned plays like many of Mackie’s netrushes on Monday.
Thus, it’s difficult to know how much success most men would have with the tactic, were they to adopt it more often. The fact that they employ it so rarely might tell us all we need to know: If more players thought that attacking the net behind the second serve return would win them more points, they’d do it. But for McDonald, it doesn’t matter what his peers do; it only matters what works for him. These 22 return approaches represented a lot more aggression than he displayed in the four previous matches we’ve charted, and it paid off.
It wasn’t enough to get him a win today against Marin Cilic, but he did outperform expectations, taking a set against the 6th seed and defending finalist. Best of all, he won more than half of Cilic’s second-serve points–a better rate than he managed against Rublev, and several ticks above 46%, the fraction that the average opponent manages against Cilic. In a sport often criticized for its uniformity of tactics, McDonald is an up-and-comer worth watching.