Back in the day, embracing the tiebreaker to decide the outcome of sets was a heavy psychological lift for players accustomed to the traditional scoring system. In later times, Electronic Line-Calling Systems presented formidable challenges on a technical level. The introduction of the 25-second shot clock sent a wave of panic through many top pros. Partisans fought bitterly over the idea of fifth-set tiebreakers at Grand Slam tournaments.
Rule changes in tennis do not happen often, swiftly, or easily. But there is one reasonable, easily implemented rule change that tennis is crying out for in an era that has given rise to the “servebot” and increased serving prowess on both the ATP and WTA Tours.
That change would eliminate the ball toss that a player ends up catching instead of hitting, ostensibly because he or she wasn’t pleased with it. The wanton toss—we’ll call it the “do-over toss,” or DOT—is a wart on the game. It violates our sense of fairness, especially because the two-serve protocol already stacks the odds heavily in the server’s favor.
Brad Gilbert, the former player, coach, and broadcast analyst has been lobbying for elimination of the DOT for a few years now—to no avail.