Tommy Robredo vs Philipp KohlschreiberHamburg Masters Round of 64

Hamburg Masters · ATP · Round of 64
44 yrs · 180 cm · Right-handed
Last 10 · pre-match
LLWLLLLLLL
2 — 1
Sets
Sunday, 11 May 2008
clay
42 yrs · 178 cm · Right-handed
Last 10 · pre-match
LLWWLLLLLL
Robredo T.
2-6 7-6 6-3
Kohlschreiber P.
Robredo T.
27762
Kohlschreiber P.
66531

Tommy Robredo defeated Philipp Kohlschreiber 2-6 7-6 6-3 in the Hamburg Masters round of 64 on clay. The result followed the form book — Tommy Robredo came in leading the head-to-head 4–3, defending last year's round of 32. Tommy Robredo extended the head-to-head to 5–3.

Key context

Head to head

43
DateTournamentRoundSurfaceWinnerScore
2014-08-04Canada MastersR64hardTommy Robredo6-3 7-6(3)
2014-05-11Rome MastersR32clayPhilipp Kohlschreiber6-2 6-4
2011-10-03BeijingR32hardPhilipp Kohlschreiber6-3 7-6(0)
2009-07-10Davis Cup WG QF: ESP vs GERRRclayPhilipp Kohlschreiber6-3 6-4 6-4
2009-05-25Roland GarrosR16clayTommy Robredo6-4 5-7 7-6(4) 6-2
2009-04-27Rome MastersR32clayTommy Robredo6-2 7-6(5)
2007-01-08AucklandQFhardTommy Robredo6-4 5-7 6-2

Serve vs return

This season
Robredo T.serving74% hold

wins 60% of points on serve vs Kohlschreiber P.

Kohlschreiber P.serving78% hold

wins 62% of points on serve vs Robredo T.

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
64%
61%
1st serve points won·Slight edge
66%
72%
2nd serve points won·Even
51%
55%
Service points won·Even
61%
65%
Return points won·Even
39%
37%
Break points saved·Even
60%
63%
Aces / match·Clear edge
2.7
4.8
Double faults / match·Slight edge
2.5
1.8

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

Clutch

Under pressure
Clutch Rating·Slight edge
45
56
Break points saved·Slight edge
87
97
Break points won·Clear edge
26
39
Deciding sets·Clear edge
73
51
Tiebreaks·Dominant
12
73

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