Public charted-match style read from Tour Radar. Use this as a style fingerprint, not a full match report.
Surge read
Mirra Andreeva profiles as a first-strike aggressor with pattern mixer and score-point closer tendencies after opponent-strength weighting and sample normalization. Mirra Andreeva wins a strong share of break-point return points (+6.8 pts vs adjusted baseline), which usually means the return profile stays aggressive when the game swings. Mirra Andreeva changes direction or takes the forehand inside more often than the adjusted peer baseline (+9.5 pts vs adjusted baseline), which is usually a front-foot signal. The return profile still creates less depth pressure than the adjusted baseline (-4.4 pts vs adjusted baseline), so servers may get into their first pattern more often.
Top traits
Watchouts
Displayed values are opponent-strength weighted, shrunk toward the tour-window baseline, and then ranked inside the current tour and window. Every card still shows the raw sample underneath.
Return Depth Pressure
Strength-adjusted value
28.3%
#53 of 57
Signal 23 / 100
Raw 27.7%
-4.4 pts vs baseline · baseline 32.7%
4087 returnable returns · weighted 4275
Higher values usually mean the return is buying time, pinning the server back, and moving the point off easy first-ball offense.
Forehand Intent
Strength-adjusted value
41.4%
#2 of 57
Signal 83 / 100
Raw 42.4%
+9.5 pts vs baseline · baseline 31.9%
6251 charted forehand directions · weighted 6513
Higher values point to a forehand that steps on the point instead of simply recycling crosscourt.
Serve Variety
Strength-adjusted value
99 / 100
#11 of 57
Signal 61 / 100
Raw 99 / 100
-0.3 pts vs baseline · baseline 100 / 100
5127 charted serves · weighted 5386
Higher values usually mean the first-ball read is harder because serve patterns are not concentrated in one lane.
Net Pressure
Strength-adjusted value
7.9%
#32 of 57
Signal 46 / 100
Raw 7.9%
-0.6 pts vs baseline · baseline 8.5%
805 net points across 10148 total points · weighted 10649
Higher values point to a profile that uses the front court as a recurring pressure tool rather than an emergency option.
Net Conversion
Strength-adjusted value
67.3%
#37 of 57
Signal 47 / 100
Raw 67.6%
-1.0 pts vs baseline · baseline 68.3%
805 net points · weighted 831
Higher values point to cleaner front-court execution once the approach or transition decision is made.
Break-Point Resistance
Strength-adjusted value
59.3%
#15 of 57
Signal 61 / 100
Raw 59.4%
+2.2 pts vs baseline · baseline 57.1%
534 break points faced on serve · weighted 564
Higher values point to a service profile that stays stable when the score tightens.
Break-Point Attack
Strength-adjusted value
52.4%
#1 of 57
Signal 87 / 100
Raw 53.0%
+6.8 pts vs baseline · baseline 45.6%
596 break points on return · weighted 618
Higher values point to a return profile that leans forward at the moment the service game can swing.
First-Strike Compression
Strength-adjusted value
50.3%
#51 of 57
Signal 32 / 100
Raw 49.3%
-6.5 pts vs baseline · baseline 56.8%
3106 charted service points · weighted 3182
Higher values point to service games that stay short and front-footed. Lower values usually mean a profile that lives in longer points.
Surface cards only appear when the window has at least 10 charted matches on that surface.
Surface
36 charted hard matches. The surface profile leans most clearly into forehand intent (+7.6 pts vs adjusted baseline), while first-strike share is softer (-4.3 pts vs adjusted baseline).
36 charted matches on hard.
Surface
31 charted clay matches. The surface profile leans most clearly into forehand intent (+10.0 pts vs adjusted baseline), while first-strike share is softer (-6.9 pts vs adjusted baseline).
31 charted matches on clay.