Tour Radar turns Jeff Sackmann's Match Charting Project into coaching-grade player fingerprints, leaderboards, and style reads. It is not a raw dump. It is the public edge of how Surge thinks about tennis.
The current build covers 81 ATP players and 57 WTA players with at least 20 charted matches since 2020. Displayed values are opponent-strength weighted and normalized inside the selected tour and window, while the raw charted sample stays visible on each player page.
Tour
Window
Window note
Charted matches from 2020 through 2025.
The default order is composite signal inside the selected window. It summarizes how strong the adjusted fingerprint is, not overall player quality. Open a player page for the metric stack, surface splits, and Surge read.
1ATP
2ATP
3ATP
ATP
ATP
ATP
ATP
ATP
ATP
Each card is a scouting angle, not a catch-all ranking. Leaderboards are based on the strength-adjusted metric values, not on raw pooled percentages.
Metric
Deep returns buy time and push the server out of the first-ball pattern.
Metric
Line-changing forehands usually mean front-foot intent, not passive exchange.
Metric
Varied serve targeting makes first-ball reads harder and patterns less predictable.
Metric
Some players use the front court occasionally. Others make it part of the pattern.
Metric
Break points expose who keeps playing on the front foot and who backs off.
Metric
Short service points are usually a clue about front-foot control, not just serve pace.
These are not match reports. They are public style reads built from the charted sample.
ATP
Jannik Sinner profiles as a pattern mixer with front-court opportunist and score-point closer tendencies after opponent-strength weighting and sample normalization. Jannik Sinner finishes cleanly once the point moves forward (+4.9 pts vs adjusted baseline).
ATP
Carlos Alcaraz profiles as a front-court opportunist with score-point closer tendencies after opponent-strength weighting and sample normalization. Carlos Alcaraz finishes cleanly once the point moves forward (+2.9 pts vs adjusted baseline).
ATP
Novak Djokovic profiles as a front-court opportunist with score-point closer and attritional absorber tendencies after opponent-strength weighting and sample normalization. Novak Djokovic finishes cleanly once the point moves forward (+2.4 pts vs adjusted baseline).