ATP Masters Miami Open
Data-Driven Preparation: How Analytics Are Reshaping Match Prep on Tour
Players are turning to serve maps, shot-by-shot dashboards and wearable data to sharpen match plans.
When Jakub Mensik was a junior his father Michal built a simple analytics platform to log serves, returns, plus-one shots and court zones. “You would be surprised!” Mensik joked in Miami. That homemade scouting helped him move from juniors into the early professional ranks. “I’m not saying my father did it better,” Mensik smiled. “But yeah, when I was a junior and basically starting to play pros, that was one of the most basic and necessary things that I needed.”
Today those basic ideas have grown into far more advanced systems. ATP Tennis IQ, relaunched and upgraded after new investment, aims to broaden access to high-quality performance data for players on the ATP Tour. “One of the things we’re most proud of with ATP Tennis IQ Powered by PIF is putting high quality data insights into the hands of more players—enabling easy access to information that can genuinely impact their careers,” said Ross Hutchins, the ATP’s Chief Sporting Officer. “Working with PIF has accelerated that progress—scaling faster, supporting more players, and delivering one of the biggest technological step changes in the sport.”
The platform offers serve patterns, rally lengths, shot placement graphics, shot quality metrics and integrated wearable data for physical measures. A point-by-point video analysis tool is in development and Challenger and doubles coverage are planned. Coaches and players suggest new features; a serve-speed-by-placement breakdown is expected later this year.
Serve maps are the most-viewed section. “From a tennis perspective that makes super sense. Basically 70% of the rallies are zero to four (shots), so that means it’s serve, return, one or two strokes, and that’s it,” he said. “(Knowing the opponent’s) serve placement makes it easier, because in tennis the serve is the only stroke that you can take your time and really think about where you will go. When you have the advantage over the opponent of knowing which side is weaker for him, then you just simply go where it’s most effective for you.”
Players vary in how deep they dive into numbers. “I trust (the stats) a lot,” she said. “Numbers can’t lie, right? I rely on that (information) a lot and I keep it in my mind when I play. A lot of times, in the key moments, it makes a big difference.” “I have a separate service that I use,” the American explained. “I’m not the one reading the stats. My coaches are… It’s not something I like to get down all the way into the details in, because I feel like it can overcomplicate things in my head.
“Something I pay attention to more so especially where my opponents like to serve I think is the most stat thing I like to know before I go on court.”
Former Olympic gold medalist Monica Puig offered a caution: “It’s a fine line. If you’re really responsible with the information that you receive you can kind of just treat it as it is, which is a number,” and “If you’re the type of player who gets a little bit too obsessed with the numbers, hand it off to your team, like I did, and have them kind of make the adjustments. Then you just kind of go along for the ride.”
Film study still matters. “After the match, I definitely looked at all the film I possibly could,” Quinn said of his loss to Carlos Alcaraz in Barcelona last year. “Just watching what Alcaraz does with a tennis ball is pretty special…
“And it’s funny, watching the film and seeing how it actually looks, versus how I felt playing the match. It’s a really good assistant coach, basically, being able to look over film and stuff.”
Looking ahead, teams are exploring AI-assisted scouting and real-time tools, but the sport’s competitive core remains human.
ATP French Open Grand Slam
Sinner’s Roland Garros run ends as sudden dizziness hands Cerundolo historic comeback
Sinner exits Roland Garros after dizziness and energy loss allow Cerundolo to mount comeback today.
On Thursday, the world No. 1 and favorite to win Roland Garros saw a commanding position evaporate and a potential title bid end in dramatic fashion. Jannik Sinner led Juan Manuel Cerundolo 6-3, 6-2, 4-1 and even reached match points, but a sudden physical issue changed the match.
Commentary during the match captured the moment’s gravity. “He knows the end is near,” Brian Anderson said. “He’s managing the pain; he’s in tennis’s version of hospice,” Anderson’s booth-mate, Jim Courier, agreed. “He’s just kinda riding this thing to the end.”
Sinner halted play and lifted his lower right leg. “I just need a moment,” he said, according to Mary Jo Fernandez on the sideline. What followed was a rapid reversal. Serving for the match at 5-2, Sinner was broken at love after a double fault. Serving for the match again at 5-4, he began with a double fault and was broken at love. He dropped 15 straight points and watched momentum swing entirely to his opponent.
“I struggled, starting to feel very dizzy,” Sinner said. “Very low of energy. Tried to serve it out, but didn’t have a lot of energy.” He added that the problem began before the match: “Woke up this morning, didn’t feel very well and tried to keep the points very short.” He also said, “I felt this morning I didn’t sleep very well,” and, “This morning when I woke up, I was struggling a bit, but you know, this can happen. Usually in Grand Slams you have a couple of days where you don’t feel perfect. This was today.” He summarized the collapse: “I was hitting very clean, very good, and then I just kind of hit the wall, and that’s it.”
Cerundolo, the 56th-ranked Argentine, grew steadier as Sinner faded and completed one of the most unlikely Grand Slam comebacks, winning 3-6, 2-6, 7-5, 6-1, 6-1. Sinner arrived at Paris after a remarkable spring: 31 straight victories and five Masters 1000 titles in 2026, including a clay sweep in Monte Carlo, Madrid, and Rome. He said he will need time to “process what went wrong here.” For now, the tournament continues without the top seed.
ATP French Open Grand Slam
17-year-old Kouame survives fifth-set fight to reach French Open third round
Moise Kouame came back from 5-2 down in the fifth to win and reach the French Open third round now.
Seventeen-year-old Moise Kouame produced a dramatic comeback at his home major, surviving a five-set battle to reach the French Open third round. Kouame opened with a two-set lead over Adolfo Daniel Vallejo, then dropped the third and fourth sets before producing the decisive recovery on Court Suzanne Lenglen.
Vallejo led the fifth set 5-2, but Kouame rallied with strong support from the crowd and closed out his first career five-set match 6-3, 7-5, 3-6, 2-6, 7-6 (10-8). “When we started the tiebreak, I was just telling myself, ‘It’s a 10-point tiebreak,’” he recalled in an interview. “When I was 6-1, I was like, ‘Moise, even if you win this point, it’s not over! It’s not over!’ It was really difficult to accept. I’m very relieved.”
The victory made Kouame the youngest man to reach the third round of the French Open since a 16-year-old Michael Chang in 1988. He also became the youngest to reach this stage at any Grand Slam since Rafael Nadal at 2003 Wimbledon.
Kouame said he will focus on recovery ahead of his next match. “For now, what is in mind is recover as much as possible for the next round. Of course, I’m happy with what I did,” he said of the achievements.
The French teenager had struggled earlier in the season, dropping back-to-back openers on the ATP Challenger Tour, but found form at Roland Garros. A native of nearby Sarcelles and working with Richard Gasquet, Kouame has now recorded wins on two different show courts. He earlier defeated Marin Cilic on Court Simonne-Mathieu and followed with this win on Lenglen.
Asked about the possibility of playing on Philippe Chatrier, Kouame reflected on the significance of the week. “It would be huge. These two courts, I will remember them forever in my tennis career and life in general,” Kouame said. “If I get the chance to play Chatrier, it would be very good.”
ATP French Open Grand Slam
Sinner’s 30-Match Streak Ends After Dramatic Turnaround by Cerundolo at Roland Garros
Cerundolo rallied from two sets and 5-1 down to beat Sinner and stop his 30-match streak.
Jannik Sinner arrived at Roland Garros as the form player on clay, but his run came to an abrupt end in the second round. He led Juan Manuel Cerundolo 6-3, 6-2, 5-1 before Cerundolo produced an extraordinary reversal, winning 18 of the final 20 games to complete the victory and halt Sinner’s 30-match winning streak.
Sinner had opened his tournament in a night session against Clement Tabur. Having won every clay event he entered this season, with trophies in Monte Carlo, Madrid and Rome, he was the pre-tournament favorite. The absence of defending champion Carlos Alcaraz further strengthened his bid to complete a Career Grand Slam, but the match on Court Philippe Chatrier did not follow the expected script.
Sinner attempted to cool himself down in-between changeovers. He did not reach match point when he led the contest. As the temperature and momentum shifted, Cerundolo seized control and produced the biggest win of his career to date: a maiden Top 10 victory.
The upset also reshaped the men’s draw. Novak Djokovic remains the lone former major title holder left, after Stan Wawrinka, Marin Cilic and Daniil Medvedev were all eliminated in the first round. For Sinner, the defeat represents his earliest exit at a major since he lost in the second round here three years ago to Daniel Altmaier.
Cerundolo’s run from a deep deficit was decisive and emphatic. For Sinner, a campaign that had appeared destined to press toward a grand slam breakthrough instead ended far earlier than anticipated. The match will be recalled for the sudden swing in momentum and for Cerundolo’s composed play in the closing stages.
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