Mission
Statement
The mission of Universal
Tennis is to help grow the game of tennis through good competition.
The Universal Tennis Rating (UTR)
system provides tennis players worldwide a common scale to determine
their level of play. The 16-level scale (from beginners to elite
world-class professionals), precisely and reliably determines
individual players ratings based on actual match results
without regard for age, gender or where the matches are played.
The Universal Tennis website, at www.universaltennis.com, allows
visitors to view more than 2.5 million tennis results.
U.S. college tennis coaches utilize
UTR ratings for recruiting, for scouting opponents, and also
to track the levels of their current players. The Intercollegiate
Tennis Association (ITA is the governing body of NCAA DI, DII,
DIII, NAIA and Junior/Community College Tennis) currently uses
UTR ratings to assist with selections and seedings for select
regional and national events.
Purpose
The purpose of any tennis rating system is to identify and group
together players of similar levels of skill and/or competitiveness.
Universal Tennis Ratings® were developed to provide a single
universal system for all players, from anywhere in
the world and at every level of play, which accurately, consistently,
objectively and reliably identifies each players true level
of play.
The 16
Levels
![](UTR/16%20Levels.jpg)
Click on the pyramid to get the page explaining each level
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Meet the
UTR "Corporate Evangelist" David Fish
![](UTR/Harvard_Logo.jpg) |
In his 40 complete seasons at Harvard,
Fish has amassed an impressive 663-303-1 overall record for a
.686 winning percentage. Fish is the winningest men's tennis
coach in Harvard history, surpassing mentor and Crimson legend
Jack Barnaby's previous record of 371 wins. |
A 1972 graduate of Harvard, Fish
played on three national championship squash teams and one Ivy
Champion tennis team with the Crimson. Fish served as captain
for both the tennis and squash teams. |
![](UTR/Dave%20Fish.jpg) |
Dave Fish tells us about the
UTR founder and president Dave Howell, who was puzzled to find
out that kids in France played tennis at more appropriate levels
and grew faster than kids in the United States. His conclusion
after lots of research: It's the US system of junior tennis that
produces so many 6-0, 6-1 matches that are not at all competitive.
He started collecting data and after looking at and evaluating
1,000 matches at all competitive levels he created the Competitive
Threshold.
In order to more accurately define
a competitive match, Universal Tennis introduced
the concept of the Competitive Threshold. A player is described
as having reached the Competitive Threshold in a match
if he or she can win 1 game more than half the number of games
needed to win the match. The table below illustrates how this
applies to matches of various formats
On average, more than 70% of
matches at ATP Grand Slam tournaments, and more than 55% of matches
at WTA Grand Slam tournaments (and ITA collegiate championships),
are competitive.
On the other hand the (American) national junior tournaments
rarely surpass the 40% mark and junior events at the sectional
and district levels fail to even make it to 30%... meaning that
some 70% of matches in those junior events are not competitive.
In contrast, Universal Tennis
has helped conduct thousands of level-based matches based on
players levels (as opposed to age or gender), and the percentage
of competitive matches for such events has consistently reached
60%, or higher, across all levels of play. We believe that there
is no question, but that playing a high percentage of competitive
matches is significantly better for player development
and overall enjoyment in the game
than playing a lot of
runaway matches. |
Guiding
Principles
According to UTR, competition
is the key to tennis player development, and the Universal Tennis
Rating® (UTR) System provides that critical component by
facilitating level-based match play.
Over the last ten years Universal
Tennis has monitored hundreds of thousands of tennis results
from professional, collegiate, and national, sectional and district
level junior tournaments, as well as high school play. Our research
has shown that events with the narrowest range of levels of players
(fewer levels) produced the highest number of competitive matches,
whereas the events with the largest range (greater number of
levels) produced the lowest number of competitive matches.
The UTR system was devised in
order to encourage and facilitate competitive matches between
similarly rated players. This led to the development of a truly
universal rating system and methodologynow
called the Universal Tennis Rating® System-- that is based
on principles not found in other tennis rating systems.
Benefits
of using the Universal Tennis Rating® System for player development
and player identification
The Universal Tennis Rating®
System offers many benefits from player development and identification
standpoints, which are highlighted below:
- Player Development: It makes
clearer the steps involved in moving from one level of play to
another and provides a motivating pathway for improvement at
any stage of the game.
- More level-based competitions
available locally allow players to remain potted
for longer in their home soil, which likely produce emotionally
healthier individuals.
- Local level-based competition
reduces missed class-time and the pressure to resort to online
schooling due to the considerable travel needed to compete nationally.
- Players grow up with the opportunity
to compete regularly against older more experienced players and
this helps them learn how to play the game sooner
and better, rather than just learning how to hit the ball well.
- It encourages more elite adult
players to stay in the game longer. These players are an essential
component in building local level-based events that are competitive
enough to challenge rising juniors.
- It provides more at risk
juniors (juniors who are not strong enough to win a round in
regular age-based competitions and are likely to give up) with
more friendly entry-level tournament play.
- Local level-based competitions
make tennis more affordable, since it makes it easy for thousands
more players young and old - to find suitable competition
locally, without the need for extensive travel to chase ranking
points.
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At the time when Dave Fish at
Harvard asked himself how to make college tennis matches more
competitive and make college players better he learned of Dave
Howell's system and connected with him in 2009. He quickly realized
that putting players together according to their levels rather
than their ages would certainly produce more competitive matches.
UTR works purely on results,
meaning using competition data, created with the Competitive
Threshold methodology. With 2.8 million results from so
many matches the system looks very reliable and accurate compared
to the "hybrid" NTRP ratings system (Fish) or the SSV
System that seems to not get any traction beyond local Southern
California.
The guiding
principles upon which the UTR system was created include:
- Competition
is good for player development:
Players get more out of pushing themselves in competitive matches
than they get out of badly losing (or easily winning) runaway,
noncompetitive matches.
- Identifying
predictably competitive matches is desirable: The UTR system is designed to help
identify which match pairings would be predictably competitive
and which match pairings would be predictably noncompetitive.
It is not the purpose of the UTR system to predict winners and
losers.
- One scale
for all players is good:
Any two players who play at the identical skill level should
have exactly the same rating
regardless of whether the
two players are the same age, the same gender, live in the same
country, play the same opponents, speak the same language, enter
the same number of tournaments.
- W-L record
is not the best indicator of a players level of play: In order to determine how good a player
is, it is more meaningful to know how many games he/she won and
lost against a given opponent than simply to know whether he/she
won the match.
- Objectivity
is better than subjectivity:
In order to ensure that all players are rated using the same
criteria every time and every place, the inherent biases of subjectivity
need to be absent from the rating system.
- Staying close
to home is good for junior development
regardless of where
home is:
The widespread (American) practice of encouraging junior tennis
players to leave home in order to develop as tennis players is
not only of limited efficacy, it is disruptive of the family
environment, disruptive to junior players social development,
disruptive of junior players class time and school work,
pulls players away from their own local teaching professionals,
and is costly, physically draining and time-consuming. The UTR
system is designed to promote localized junior player development
when practical by identifying all potentially competitive opponents,
and giving rating credit for all match results, regardless
of the location of the matches.
- Playing to
win every game is good for player development: Continuing to play hard til the
end even when youre in a predictably losing battleis
beneficial to the development of both players of a match. The
UTR system is designed to encourage players to continue to win
games, even when far down, by giving rating credit
for each game won.
- Gaming
the system is counterproductive to player development: Existing rating systems in which players
game the system in order to manipulate their own
ratings are notorious, well known and counterproductive. Ratings
should accurately identify each players actual skill level
and should not be susceptible to player manipulation.
- Chasing
points is counterproductive to player development: A players level of play is not
a measure of how many matches he/she has played, but is a measure
of how well he/she plays in each match. Rating/Ranking schemes
that award players primarily for chasing points (by awarding
ranking points for rounds won) are counterproductive to player
development. In effect, players are incentivized for finding
events that present the least risk with the greatest reward.
- Level-based
tournament play is good for the game: The frequent practice of setting up tournament
draws wherein the top seeded player plays the lowest-level, and
often badly overwhelmed, opponent in the opening round is frequently
a waste of time (and, often, travel and money) for both players.
The UTR system is directed at facilitating level-based
tournament play, in which competitors are matched against similarly-rated
players and earn their way into play against higher-rated
opponents.
- Retiring
early in tough matches is counterproductive to player development: The UTR system is designed to dissuade
players from retiring early against formidable foes in order
to protect their current rating/ranking.
- Due credit
should be given for Back Draw match play: The UTR system is designed to dissuade
players from dropping out of tournaments in order to protect
their current rating/ranking.
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Dave Fish explains that UTR is
creating solid relationships with USTA Sections. Northern California
started 3 years ago and also the Midwest Section has adopted
the system.
"The future is unlimited
for UTR. There are 206 tennis federations around the world and
UTR could connect them all. " |
Dave Fish says, " We were
losing too many players at every level. UTR creates a win-win-win
for kids."
- Kids get better faster
- UTR produces a local ecosystem
of competition
- More affordable for parents,
kids miss less school through less long distance travel
- Level based play creates a higher
degree of competitive matches
- UTR produces happier players
that are more likely to stay in the sport
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