Fabrice Santoro vs Tommy HaasHamburg Masters Round of 32

Hamburg Masters · ATP · Round of 32
53 yrs · 178 cm · Right-handed
Last 10 · pre-match
LLLLWLWLLL
0 — 0
Sets
Monday, 4 May 1998
clay
48 yrs · 188 cm · Right-handed
Last 10 · pre-match
LLLLLLWWLW
Santoro F.
6-4 6-4
Haas T.
Santoro F.
662
Haas T.
44

Fabrice Santoro defeated Tommy Haas 6-4 6-4 in the Hamburg Masters round of 32 on clay. The upset overturned the form book — Tommy Haas came in leading the head-to-head 6–2, defending last year's semi-final. Fabrice Santoro narrowed the head-to-head to 6–3.

Key context

  • Match story: Fabrice Santoro edged a tight contest from start to finish — 6–4 6–4.

Head to head

26
DateTournamentRoundSurfaceWinnerScore
2002-10-14Madrid MastersR32clayFabrice Santoro7-6(7) 4-1 RET
2002-07-29Canada MastersQFhardTommy Haas6-4 4-6 6-3
1999-08-09Cincinnati MastersR32hardTommy Haas6-0 6-7(1) 6-3
1999-01-18Australian OpenR16hardTommy Haas6-2 6-3 7-5
1998-10-19LyonR16clayTommy Haas2-6 6-3 7-5
1998-08-03Canada MastersR32hardTommy Haas7-6(8) 6-2
1998-05-18DusseldorfRRclayTommy Haas7-5 6-2
1997-10-13LyonFclayFabrice Santoro6-4 6-4

Serve vs return

This season
Santoro F.serving76% hold

wins 61% of points on serve vs Haas T.

Haas T.serving80% hold

wins 63% of points on serve vs Santoro F.

Even serve battle

Each player's serve crossed against the other's return, converted to expected hold of serve. Recent completed matches, ATP, WTA & Challenger. About

Statistics

This season
1st serve in·Even
57%
61%
1st serve points won·Even
69%
73%
2nd serve points won·Even
51%
53%
Service points won·Even
61%
65%
Return points won·Even
38%
36%
Break points saved·Even
60%
63%
Aces / match·Clear edge
4.2
6.0
Double faults / match·Dominant
1.8
3.5

Averages over each player's completed matches in the selected window (200 vs 200). ATP, WTA & Challenger.

Clutch

Under pressure
Clutch Rating·Clear edge
51
64
Break points saved·Clear edge
80
94
Break points won·Clear edge
54
35
Deciding sets·Clear edge
50
74
Tiebreaks·Dominant
59
87

Performance in the biggest moments — break points, deciding sets and tiebreaks (0–100, higher is better). About

Draw