You don’t have to dive too deeply into tennis to come up with potentially beneficial rule changes. Why not make brief, end-of-set breaks a regular feature? How about counting an errant ball toss that goes un-hit a fault? How about outlawing the deadly I-formation in doubles?
The only thing standing in the way of those and other tweaks is the game’s lack of a “rules (or competition) committee.”
The NFL, NBA and MLB all have such entities, but not pro tennis. It’s one of the main reasons that, for too many years, the Grand Slam tournaments couldn’t even agree on how to end a five-set match, and why the ATP and WTA haven’t embraced the simple idea of playing let serves.
“I don't think we even have a rules committee in the ATP Tour,” renowned coach Dave McPherson, who guided the brilliant doubles career of brothers Bob and Mike Bryan, told me recently. “It's bizarre to me. I don't know why we're so stodgy in tennis, where we don't look at things. We don't have an independent panel that looks at the rules each year and asks, ‘How can we make the game more attractive, singles and doubles?'"
Read More: Question: Is it time to eliminate the do-over serve toss?

