G’day from Paris,
Holding serve at Roland Garros is a challenging proposition. Only the strong survive. Here are the numbers from the women’s qualifying draw.
- Women Qualifying holding serve = 60% (1328/2219)
That’s not very high. Dropping serve four times out of ten clearly does not make the serve the powerful weapon it is designed to be.
Now, imagine for a moment that there is ONE thing that you could do to instantly raise the chance of you holding 60% of the time all the way up to 75%?
60% to 75%. Just one thing. Sounds too good to be true?
It’s not.
Here’s how to do it. Win the opening point of your service game and surge to a 15-0 lead. That’s it. Winning the opening point of your service game “sets the weather” and begins momentum rolling your way. Winning the opening point of your service game is such a great hack for holding serve more often. Here’s the numbers…
2026 Roland Garros Women’s Qualifying Draw
- Holding serve = 60% (1328/2219)
- Holding serve from 15-0 = 75% (896/1201)
- Holding serve from 0-15 = 42% (432/1018)
What a massive difference for the women when they win or lose the first point. Win just one point and you are cruising with a 75% chance of holding. But lose it, and you are now more likely to get broken than to hold. The win percentage plummets to just 42%!
Here’s where things keep getting interesting. You would think players would be doing all they can to surge ahead 15-0 to enjoy the increased hold percentage, but it’s not the case at all.
2026 Roland Garros Women’s Qualifying Draw
- Winning opening point to go to 15-0 = 54% (1201/2219)
- Losing opening point to drop to 0-15 = 46% (1018/2219)
The server wins the opening point when serving just 54% of the time. That’s not enough. There is so much more opportunity to improve just right here.
IMPROVE YOUR ODDS OF HOLDING SERVE
Webinar 3: Serve Strategy And Patterns
Webinar 21: Serve And Volley / Return And Volley
Webinar 34: The Eight Serve Locations
Webinar 54: First Point Of The Game
Here’s more fascinating serve data that can help supercharge our ability to hold serve.
All First Serves In = 85% hold
Making all first serves in the game bolsters your chance of winning the game all the way up to 85%. Now, I imagine that does not mean you just roll your first serve in and dominate from there. You need to hit your first serve, and in this case, you were able to make them all in the same game.
Here are five things to focus on when the server starts their service game at Love All.
First Serves
Make your first serve. Serving more at the body to take the singles sideline and center line out of play. Returners are typically better at blocking a jam backhand return back into play than a jam forehand return.
Serve +1 Forehands
Look for a Serve +1 forehand, especially as a run-around forehand. This will “freeze” the returner as most run-around forehands are hit with an open stance, and it’s impossible to read where the shot is going.
Net Play
.The average win percentage from the baseline is 48%. It’s 64% points won from the front of the court. Look to move forward to better take control of the point.
Hit Behind
Chasing the illusion of the open court leads to many errors, because that space is rapidly shrinking as the opponent runs toward it. Let them run, and use their speed against them by hitting back behind them.
Avoid Secondary Patterns This is not really a time to hit drop shots or go for winners down the line. Keep the strategy simple and let the opponent go for a higher-risk shot to finish the point.
