Monday, August 12, 2019

2019 PNW USTA League 18 & Over Champions Crowned

This weekend found the PNW USTA League 18 & Over Sectionals being played in Portland.  My preview said it was a balanced and wide open event with no district overwhelmingly favored, and it turned out that was the case.

Here are the teams that won it all and are now qualified for Nationals.

Women

  • 2.5 - Robinswood-Schultze (NWW) beat Pro Sports Club-Robertson (NWW) 3-0
  • 3.0 - Eastside TC-Wyer (NWW) beat Portland TC-Casey/Johnson (N OR) 3-2
  • 3.5 - Salem T&SC Chamberlain-Horn (S OR) beat Eastside TC-Hubbard (NWW) 3-2
  • 4.0 - Stafford Hills-Zielinski (N OR) beat TCSP-McCoy (NWW) 4-1
  • 4.5 - Gorge AC-Kinsfogel (E WA) beat Salem T&SC-Fraser/Heikila (S OR) 4-1
  • 5.0+ - Vancouver TC-Kowalewski (N OR) beat TCSP-Gleason/Bassetti (NWW) 2-1

Men

  • 3.0 - Portland TC-Bracken/Bui (N OR) beat Eastside TC-Acuario (NWW) 3-2
  • 3.5 - Tri-Cities CC-Kohan (E WA) beat Central Park-Paulson (NWW) 4-1
  • 4.0 - Vancouver TC-Won (N OR) beat Stafford Hills-Williams/Monson (N OR) 4-1
  • 4.5 - Mercer Island-Glick (NWW) beat Amy Yee TC-Ngeth (NWW) 3-2
  • 5.0+ - West Hills-Dusicka (N OR) beat Mercer Island-Murphy (NWW) 2-1

The totals by district are:
  1. Portland - 5
  2. Seattle - 3
  3. Eastern Washington - 2
  4. Southern Oregon - 1

This is reasonably balanced, still a bias towards the larger cities with Portland beating out Seattle.

Congratulations to all the teams that competed, and good luck to those headed to Nationals!

When standings/seeding comes down to a coin flip in USTA League - Another case of insufficient tie-breakers

The 40 & Over Mixed season has just completed its regular season in my area and teams are now advancing to local playoffs.  Our local playoffs have the top-2 teams from each sub-flight advance into a single elimination bracket so seeding is important as it determines where the teams go in the bracket and who plays who.

The seeding is done using the standard USTA regulations and what TennisLink uses for standings, that is:

  • Team won/loss record
  • Individual court record
  • Head-to-head
  • Sets lost
  • Games lost
  • The dreaded coin flip

When you are doing seeding and breaking ties between teams from different sub-flights, head-to-head won't come into play, so it is pretty common that the sets lost and even games lost tie-breakers come into play.  And every once in awhile, it comes down to the coin flip.

That every once in awhile appears to have happened for one flight this year as there are two teams from different sub-flights tied with a record of 4-2, each with an 11-7 court record, each with 18 sets lost, and each with 171 games lost.  Let's bring on the coin flip to decide things!

Now, the good news is this is just for seeding, it is not determining which team will advance and which won't.  But while rare, a tie certainly could occur in the same sub-flight where a coin flip would decide which team advances and which doesn't.

Could this coin flip be avoided?  Absolutely!  I've written about the shortcomings of the current standings tie-breakers for awhile and even went through the process last year to submit a rules change proposal to fix it, but alas the proposal was not adopted and we are stuck with the current flawed tie-breakers.  Well, to be fair, the PNW section has adopted a local section rule in one case to fix one of the more egregious scenarios, but the problem remains in all the others.

Here is what should have happened.  The criteria used before sets lost should have been sets won/lost differential.  By this measure, team A was +5 (23-18) and team B was also +5 (23-18), so this is a push.  Next, rather than going to the horribly flawed games lost tie-breaker, it should have been games won/lost differential where team A was +15 (186-171) while team B was was -4 (167-171).  Certainly team A should get the higher seeding as by an objective metric (where they are clearly better, it isn't even close), and not a random coin toss!

Now, it is possible that team A wins the coin toss and this is all moot.  Or it is possible team B wins the coin toss and both teams lose first round and it is all moot.  And this is only for seeding so isn't really that big a deal right?  But if the rules could easily be altered to doing the seeding more fairly and equitably, why not do it?

What do you think?

Friday, August 9, 2019

How often to players playing up pull the upset and win? Interesting Tennis League Stats

In USTA League in the main Adult leagues, players may play at their rated level, but may also "play up" one level.  For example, a player who was a 3.5C at the end of 2018 can play on a 3.5 team but also a 4.0 team*.

An oft discussed question is whether playing up is a good idea or not.  Proponents of it say it give players more opportunity to play and gives them a chance to challenge themselves playing higher rated players.  Opponents of it say it causes the the higher level to become watered down when too many players play up, and leads to pointless uncompetitive matches.

I thought it might be interesting to look at some stats to see what the competitiveness of these matches is and how often the player playing up actually pulls the upset and wins.

For the purposes of this analysis, I'm looking at matches between players that are currently 3.5C and 4.0C rated players playing singles matches in the 18 & Over or 40 & Over leagues and looking at matches playing during the 2019 calendar year.

First, I show that there have been just under 10K of such matches played, 9,941 to be precise as of when I'm writing this.  So that is a pretty good sample size.  Of those, 1,899, or 19.1% were won by the lower rated player.

On the surface, that sounds pretty high.  Nearly 20% of matches between such players are won by the player playing up!  But when you think about it, is it really that surprising?  Even if every player was strictly within the range for their level, you would still have a 3.5 who is a "3.50" play against a 4.0 that is a "3.51" periodically, and you'd really expect the 3.5 to win about 50% of these.  Add to that that players playing up are often played on court 2 singles and that is often where the weaker at-level players are found and the nearly 20% is less surprising.  The consider that some 4.0s are declining and about to be bumped down to 3.5 while some 3.5s are improving and about to be bumped up, and that the "3.5" is probably favored in these, and the 20% and less surprising still.  And then consider there may be a few matches where the 4.0 was intentionally losing trying to manage their rating down ... 😞

Second, it is probably worthwhile looking at how many of these matches actually have the 3.5 rated high now (using my ratings), and we see that 1,255 of them have the 3.5 now rated higher, and so arguably they were supposed to win.  But only 937 were actually won by the 3.5 where they are now not higher rated, so this is probably the real value that should be considered the number of upsets, this being just 9.4% of the matches.


Third, let's look at some details from these true upsets.  Of the 937, 447 of them were straight-set wins for the 3.5, and of these they gave up:
  • six or fewer games 220 times
  • four or fewer 103 times
  • two or fewer 29 times
  • one or fewer 8 times
  • twice the match was won giving up no games

So when the 3.5 wins, the match is usually very close to competitive, very rarely is it both an upset and a lopsided win for the 3.5.  And while there were two times it was a double bagel for the 3.5, considering all the variables in a tennis match, e.g. good/bad days, injured but complete match anyway, etc., that really isn't that many.

Fourth, what about how competitive the losses are?  Where the 3.5 lost, 1,079 were in a 3rd set, 10.9% very competitive.  But the 3.5 won:
  • six or fewer games 5,738 times (57.7%)
  • four or fewer 4,157 (41.8%)
  • two or fewer 2,080 (20.9%)
  • one or fewer 1,052 (10.6%)
  • no games 349 (3.5%)

Depending on your definition of a lopsided, 20-40% of the total matches where a 3.5 plays up against a 4.0, it is a lopsided win for the 4.0.  And the 3.5 gets one game or fewer in more than 10% of the matches.

In summary, we see that while about 20% of these playing up matches are won by the player playing up, less than 10% should really be considered upsets, and of those, no more than a few hundred are approaching being a lopsided win for the lower rated player.

What do you think?  Does allowing playing up do more good than bad?  Is it a necessary way for players to challenge themselves?  Or is it abused and far too many players play up leading to uncompetitive matches?

* - Some areas may have restrictions on playing up or how many teams a player may play on in the same league

PNW USTA League 18 & Over Sectionals Begin Today - Quick Preview

In the Pacific Northwest section of the USTA, August is the big month for Sectionals with 18 & Over and 40 & Over Adult league champions being crowned.

This year, 18 & Over starts things off this weekend 8/9 thru 8/11 in the greater Portland area.  The 40 & Over league will determine its Sectional champ in two weeks 8/23-8/25 also in Portland.

Doing a quick review of the flights this weekend using my ratings, it appears these are the favorites for the women:
  • 2.5W - The two NWW teams and Irvington from N. OR lead the way
  • 3.0W - The top four teams cover SWW, NWW, N. OR, and E. WA
  • 3.5W - Five teams close lead by Sunset AC from N. OR
  • 4.0W - HBSQ from NWW and the two N. OR teams lead
  • 4.5W - Vancouver TC from N. OR is the clear favorite
  • 5.0+W - Vancouver TC and the two NWW teams lead the way

For the men:
  • 3.0M - Sunset AC (N. OR) and Amy Yee (NWW) lead a tight grouping from all Districts
  • 3.5M - Tri-Cities (E. WA) and Stafford Hills (N. OR) lead the way
  • 4.0M - Stafford Hills and Vancouver TC from N. OR lead the way
  • 4.5M - Cascade AC from N. OR is the clear favorite
  • 5.0+M - West Hills (N. OR) and Columbia Basin (E. WA) lead

Interestingly, while Northwest Washington has won the vast majority of Sectionals in recent years, they are not the favorites nor even mentioned for the majority of the men's flights.  From these previews, Northern Oregon should be expected to take the most titles.

But it always depends on who actually plays and the match-ups captains are able to get, so we'll see what happens!

Should anyone be interested in flight or team reports to help prepare for a match this weekend, in two weeks for 40 & Over, or for preparing for any flight in the regular season or playoffs, contact me!