Tennis has four majors, but Wimbledon always
stands alone as it has since 1877. There are traditions here that make it
unlike anywhere else, from the strawberries and cream to the Royals to the
“Ladies” and “Gentlemen’s” divisions to the dress code. Most unique of all is
the playing surface. Wimbledon remains the only major and one of the few
tournaments overall to use grass courts. It plays differently from other
surfaces as the bounces are lower, and the points are shorter and thus
frequently different types of players can excel here.
Though Wimbledon does not start until June,
sportsbooks have already posted odds. Here are the favorites over at BetMGM.
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Djokovic +100
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Berrettini +700
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Nadal +800
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Medvedev +800
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Alcaraz +800
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Kyrgios +1000
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Zverev +1200
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Sinner +1400
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Auger-Aliassime +1600
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Rune +1600
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Tsitsipas +2200
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The Champion
Novak Djokovic opens up as a heavy favorite,
an even money bet vs the rest of the field. It makes sense as he has veritably
owned Center Court. Djokovic counts seven Wimbledon titles among his 21 overall
Grand Slams, including the last four. Wimbledon did not take place in 2020,
thus Novak amazingly has not lost here since 2017. He may have won in 2017 as
well were it not for an elbow injury that forced him to retire in the
quarterfinals.
Djokovic has a career mark of 89-10 at
Wimbledon and 109-18 overall on grass. He has won 70.2% of his career service
points on grass and 39.8% of his return points, giving him a Dominance Ratio (%
of service points won divided by % of return points lost) of 1.33. In 2022 he
has a Dominance Ratio (DR) of 1.53 on grass and 1.39 overall. To put that in
perspective, he was the only player on tour last year to have a DR over 1.23
overall. He completely ruled on grass and was the best player overall. He
closed the year ranked fifth however due only to not playing the full schedule.
The challengers
Matteo Berrettini lost to Djokovic in the 2021
Wimbledon finals, then tested Covid positive ahead of last year’s tournament
and had to withdraw. He is an excellent player on grass, having won the Queen's
Club Championships the last two seasons as well as the Stuttgart Open. All told
the 25 years old is 33-6 overall on grass and 9-0 in the past year. He had a DR
of 1.29 in 2022 which ranked fourth on the tour, and a 1.25 grass DR for his
career. The 6’5” Berrettini had a 20.1% ace percentage on grass ranked third in
2022.
Rafa Nada of course needs no introduction. The
King of Clay is also the master of the return game, which does not play quite
as well on grass. Still Rafa is no slouch at the All England club as he won
titles here in 2008 and 2010. Nada has gone 58-13 in his career at Wimbledon
and 76-21 overall on grass. Despite a middling 6.7% ace ratio, Nadal’s return
game is so good he still matches Berrettini’s grass court 1.25 DR. The all-time
Grand Slam leader made it to the Wimbledon semis in 2022 but had to withdraw
with an abdominal injury.
Right here right now 19 year old Carlos
Alcaraz looks like the future King of Clay. Like his countryman Nadal, his game
does not translate quite as well on grass, albeit in a very small sample. It is
of course way early. Rafa has 22 Grand Slam titles and 14 French Opens, Alcaraz
has the current number one overall ranking and one US Open. Again, he is just
19.
Alcaraz has only played in two Wimbledons and
no other grass court tournaments. Alcaraz made it to the 4th round in 2022 and
presumably will play in the 2023 Wimbledon. He is currently sidelined with a
hamstring injury but tweeted that he will return to the tour for next month’s
Argentine Open. For what it's worth, Alcarez is 4-2 in his career on grass, 13-10
in sets, with a 1.07 DR. Taking him at
+800 really is just a wager on his overall skill translating well enough on a
very unfamiliar surface.
Daniil Medvedev is another top ranked player
with a Grand Slam title to his name, in his case the 2021 US Open. He also has
not mastered the grass, peaking in the fourth round at Wimbledon in 2021 and
then not being allowed to play in 2022 thanks to the All England Club banning
Russian and Belorussian players. He did show well on the three grass
tournaments he entered in 2022, reaching the finals in two of them. In his
career, Medvedev is 10-5 at Wimbledon and 33-17 overall on grass with a 1.11
DR. He does have a 11.1% Ace percentage which beats the clay court guys but is
likely not dominant enough to carry his game on grass.
Then there is the enigmatic Nick Kyrgios. He
stormed literally and figuratively to the Wimbledon finals in 2022. His overall
ranking peaked back in 2016 at 13, but he has often played very well on grass
in an overall inconsistent career. He is 21-8 at Wimbledon in his career and
37-19 overall on grass. He can dominate with his big serve on grass as he has a
19.5% Ace percentage and wins 70.1% of his service points overall. He was even
better in 2022 on grass, winning 72.7% of his service points and second only to
Djokovic, with 20.6% Aces. He is not as good an overall player as other top
challengers but after Berrittini he may pose the biggest threat to Djokovic at
Wimbledon.
Conclusion
While Nadal has a serious threat in Alcaraz on
clay, Njokovic does not quite have that just yet on grass. Novak is even money,
so perhaps literally a “field” bet makes some sense. Injuries and
disqualifications happen, as does facing a hot player somewhere along the way.
Berrettini does look both like the biggest threat on grass but not necessarily
the overall player to win it here.