We investigate whether expert players with high incentives are able to optimally determine their degree of risk taking in contest. We use a large dataset on tennis matches and look at players risk taking on first and second serves. We isolate a specific situation, let serves, where second serves and first serves occur in a way which is as good as random. This creates the setting of a quasi-experiment which we can use to study players’ serving strategies on first and second serves in comparable serving situations. We find that players, both men and women, are able to adopt serving strategies which meet the requirements of optimality arising from simple assumptions about risk-return trade-offs in serves
In a tennis match it is not uncommon for games to ‘go with service’ (ie. 1-0, 1-1, 2-1, 2-2, 3-2, so...
Value functions are used in sports applications to determine the optimal action players should emplo...
Investigations of elite tennis match-play have highlighted the importance of serving and returning s...
We investigate whether expert players with high incentives are able to optimally determine their deg...
Analyzing risk-taking strategies in tennis is complicated. There has been a tendency to analyze risk...
A player can get a high percentage of first serves into court by taking a low risk on first service,...
We consider the question whether top tennis players in a top tournament (Wimbledon) employ an optima...
In tennis the serve can be a most powerful weapon. However in badminton, the serve holds a much lowe...
We consider the question whether top tennis players in a top tournament (Wimbledon) employ an optima...
We consider the question whether top tennis players in a top tournament (Wimbledon) employ an optima...
In this work we look at the optimal criteria for taking a long (risky) serve in badminton. A simulat...
This paper demonstrates how tennis players can optimize their chance of winning a match by using str...
The execution of the serve return is of particular importance given the increasing serve speeds that...
This thesis investigates strategic behaviour in games; it aims at identifying the causal effect of i...
Minimax and its generalization to mixed strategy Nash equilibrium is the cornerstone of our understa...
In a tennis match it is not uncommon for games to ‘go with service’ (ie. 1-0, 1-1, 2-1, 2-2, 3-2, so...
Value functions are used in sports applications to determine the optimal action players should emplo...
Investigations of elite tennis match-play have highlighted the importance of serving and returning s...
We investigate whether expert players with high incentives are able to optimally determine their deg...
Analyzing risk-taking strategies in tennis is complicated. There has been a tendency to analyze risk...
A player can get a high percentage of first serves into court by taking a low risk on first service,...
We consider the question whether top tennis players in a top tournament (Wimbledon) employ an optima...
In tennis the serve can be a most powerful weapon. However in badminton, the serve holds a much lowe...
We consider the question whether top tennis players in a top tournament (Wimbledon) employ an optima...
We consider the question whether top tennis players in a top tournament (Wimbledon) employ an optima...
In this work we look at the optimal criteria for taking a long (risky) serve in badminton. A simulat...
This paper demonstrates how tennis players can optimize their chance of winning a match by using str...
The execution of the serve return is of particular importance given the increasing serve speeds that...
This thesis investigates strategic behaviour in games; it aims at identifying the causal effect of i...
Minimax and its generalization to mixed strategy Nash equilibrium is the cornerstone of our understa...
In a tennis match it is not uncommon for games to ‘go with service’ (ie. 1-0, 1-1, 2-1, 2-2, 3-2, so...
Value functions are used in sports applications to determine the optimal action players should emplo...
Investigations of elite tennis match-play have highlighted the importance of serving and returning s...