A tipping service dedicated to Tennis Betting - www.tennis-tipster.co.uk
Tennis Tipster Home PageBets ArchiveLatest NewsTennis TournamentsTennis Betting ResultsAbout Tennis Betting

ATP TourWTA Tour
 R Nadal
1
S Williams 
 R Federer
2
C Wozniacki 
 N Djokovic
3
J Jankovic 
 A Murray
4
K Clijsters 
 R Soderling
5
V Williams 
 N Davydenko
6
S Stosur 
 T Berdych
7
F Schiavone 
 F Verdascso
8
E Dementieva 
 A Roddick
9
A Radwanska 
 JM Del Potro
10
N Li 
Rankings on 23/08/10

Sign up for free bets from the Tennis Betting Service by email and SMS

Free Bets from all major bookmakers in UK and Ireland

>> Home >> Tennis Betting News >> The Art Of Outright Tennis Betting: Surface
Thursday 29th July

The Art Of Outright Tennis Betting:
Lesson 5 - The Surface

One of the great advantages of tennis, in terms of betting as much as viewing, is the use of different surfaces at different ATP Tour events.

Fast clay courts present a very different challenge to slower hard courts
Fast clay courts present a very different challenge to slower hard courts
The 2010 schedule of 65 main events is split, broadly speaking, between hard courts (both indoor and outdoor), clay and grass. The majority (37) are played on the faster, harder surfaces with clay (21) the next most widely used and the grass court season (6) now limited to a handful of events in June/July.

What this often highlights amongst the players is a difference in ability, a variety of performance and often a mismatch of styles. For example, if a natural clay-courter plays an opponent considered as a 'hard-court player' on a slow dirt surface then we all know who is going to win. However, put the same players on a quicker, bouncier surface and it's the hard court performer who comes out on top.

We can easily exploit such situations in match betting situations but we can also utilise this phenomenon when we consider outright tournament betting.

Bookmakers often give undue credit to (a) well ranked players (b) recent tour winners or (c) players generally in good form. The point is, that doesn't always take into consideration the surface which is being used ... so you're in great form on clay but we're playing on grass this week!

Astute tennis traders should be able to spot these situations - on the one hand, discounting players in the draw who aren't suited to the surface but, on the other, locating those who can be expected to significantly up their performance (simply because of the particular type of court in use).

Example: Lleyton Hewitt (Halle 2010) WON 14/1

Hewitt's career record (537:188) shows a 74% winning ratio on all surfaces. However, concentrate purely on grass and his 98:23 record actually shows the Aussie winning 81% of his matches. This surface, being used for the Gerry Weber event in Germany, was statistically Hewitt's best surface. He'd also played in the final of six grass court tournaments prior to this event ... and won all six. In moderate form coming into the grass court season, a return to the 'green stuff' saw him land a 7th title on the surface at what was a hugely inflated price.

Remember, therefore, to give due credit to a player's form on the surface being used and not to the success they may have enjoyed on another type of court. Certainly players can 'carry over' their form from one to another but generally speaking, even amongst the very top performers, you'll find significant differences in ability (and so opportunities to exploit).

Also Read:
Lesson 1 - The Draw
Lesson 2 - Course & Distance Form
Lesson 3 - Seeding
Lesson 4 - Age

Big winning tennis outright and match betting advice from the Tennis Betting Service Baseline Bulletin