- Joined
- Apr 14, 2013
- Messages
- 10,582
- Reactions
- 6,427
- Points
- 113
So over the last week or so I've been spending WAY too much time playing with a new visual tool I created to analyze and compare players, and I wanted to share it with my friends here at Tennis Frontier. I was considering doing a blog article about this, and may at some point, but I'm also thinking this might work best as a thread.
Anyhow, it struck me while putting these together that as much as I like tennis statistics, I even more enjoy visuals that express or explain some aspect of tennis, particularly in relation to history and career accomplishments. This is the latest "fruit" of my ongoing experimentation.
So what is this, you ask? Well, I call them "skyscrapers" because that's kind of what they look like. But basically it is a way of depicting a player's major accomplishments in an informative and aesthetically pleasing manner. Here's how it works...
Each player skyscraper has a dark and light color. The dark color are titles, the light second week Slam appearances that aren't wins.
Each block represents (roughly) 250 ATP points, so for the titles an ATP 250 is one block, ATP 500 two blocks, Olympics gold is three blocks, Masters four blocks, World Tour Finals six blocks, and Slams eight blocks. I've also given five blocks for the defunct WCT finals and Grand Slam Cup. For Slam appearances (light color), I've given two blocks for a quarterfinal, three blocks for a semifinal, and four blocks for a final (I'm considering playing around with the ratio here, but this is what I'm going for now).
Just to clarify: these skyscrapers do not depict a player's entire career - they depict the span in which a player was winning titles and/or reaching the second week of Slams, what we could call their "contender phase" of playing.
Anyhow, I've done dozens of players going back to Bill Tilden, although almost all in the Open Era. The further back, the less accurate. For instance, the data is fuzzy on how the tournaments differentiate as recently as the 70s-80s, but certainly before the Open Era. For that I used TennisBase's tournament types, although had to stop as TB now requires an 85 euro per year signup fee (blah). So consider the older players to be less accurate, and all players to be more approximations than any final determination of their greatness.
But the bottom line is that I find this to be a very interesting and useful way to compare players. I found out some rather interesting things through doing this that I'll talk about as I share more players.
To start, here are the Big Four. I'll post my comments in a reply. Enjoy!
p.s. Part of the point of this thread is that I am taking requests! If you want to see a particular player, or players compared, please let me know and I'll be happy to oblige! Otherwise I'll probably just post sets of chronologically similar players going backwards in time over the next few days.
Anyhow, it struck me while putting these together that as much as I like tennis statistics, I even more enjoy visuals that express or explain some aspect of tennis, particularly in relation to history and career accomplishments. This is the latest "fruit" of my ongoing experimentation.
So what is this, you ask? Well, I call them "skyscrapers" because that's kind of what they look like. But basically it is a way of depicting a player's major accomplishments in an informative and aesthetically pleasing manner. Here's how it works...
Each player skyscraper has a dark and light color. The dark color are titles, the light second week Slam appearances that aren't wins.
Each block represents (roughly) 250 ATP points, so for the titles an ATP 250 is one block, ATP 500 two blocks, Olympics gold is three blocks, Masters four blocks, World Tour Finals six blocks, and Slams eight blocks. I've also given five blocks for the defunct WCT finals and Grand Slam Cup. For Slam appearances (light color), I've given two blocks for a quarterfinal, three blocks for a semifinal, and four blocks for a final (I'm considering playing around with the ratio here, but this is what I'm going for now).
Just to clarify: these skyscrapers do not depict a player's entire career - they depict the span in which a player was winning titles and/or reaching the second week of Slams, what we could call their "contender phase" of playing.
Anyhow, I've done dozens of players going back to Bill Tilden, although almost all in the Open Era. The further back, the less accurate. For instance, the data is fuzzy on how the tournaments differentiate as recently as the 70s-80s, but certainly before the Open Era. For that I used TennisBase's tournament types, although had to stop as TB now requires an 85 euro per year signup fee (blah). So consider the older players to be less accurate, and all players to be more approximations than any final determination of their greatness.
But the bottom line is that I find this to be a very interesting and useful way to compare players. I found out some rather interesting things through doing this that I'll talk about as I share more players.
To start, here are the Big Four. I'll post my comments in a reply. Enjoy!
p.s. Part of the point of this thread is that I am taking requests! If you want to see a particular player, or players compared, please let me know and I'll be happy to oblige! Otherwise I'll probably just post sets of chronologically similar players going backwards in time over the next few days.
