Rob Persiano is the chief operating officer of Seneca Resources, an information technology (IT) services and consulting firm headquartered in Reston, Virginia. In this position he is tasked with both the development and implementation of short- and long-term business strategies at the firm. Outside of his work in the IT industry, Rob Persiano maintains a number of interests, including tennis.
The United States Tennis Association (USTA) has partnered with IBM for nearly three decades to bring tennis fans in-depth, analytically driven player and match-up evaluations, particularly during the US Open. This partnership is best embodied by the IBM SlamTracker.
At first glance, the SlamTracker may appear to be a simple digital scorecard, providing fans with up-to-the-second scores from dozens of different courts at the USTA Billie Jean King Tennis Center. However, SlamTracker also tracks and interprets point-to-point changes over the course of each match. Tracking these changes allows the SlamTracker to detect “pressure situations” and changes in “momentum,” providing statistical means of illustrating the competitive arc of a match and predicting the outcome of a set or match.
Perhaps more impressive is the IBM SlamTracker’s Keys to the Match feature, which analyzes more than a decade of Grand Slam matches (more than 12,000 matches). Analysis includes past head-to-head meetings and matches between players with similar styles. SlamTracker then sets measurable goals for both players prior to a match, and gauges each player's odds of winning depending on how well or poorly they do in hitting these marks. Examples of Keys to the Match predictors include “Player 1 must win more than 63 percent of rallies that fall between four and nine shots” or “Player 2 must maintain a first serve percentage of at least 73 percent.”
The United States Tennis Association (USTA) has partnered with IBM for nearly three decades to bring tennis fans in-depth, analytically driven player and match-up evaluations, particularly during the US Open. This partnership is best embodied by the IBM SlamTracker.
At first glance, the SlamTracker may appear to be a simple digital scorecard, providing fans with up-to-the-second scores from dozens of different courts at the USTA Billie Jean King Tennis Center. However, SlamTracker also tracks and interprets point-to-point changes over the course of each match. Tracking these changes allows the SlamTracker to detect “pressure situations” and changes in “momentum,” providing statistical means of illustrating the competitive arc of a match and predicting the outcome of a set or match.
Perhaps more impressive is the IBM SlamTracker’s Keys to the Match feature, which analyzes more than a decade of Grand Slam matches (more than 12,000 matches). Analysis includes past head-to-head meetings and matches between players with similar styles. SlamTracker then sets measurable goals for both players prior to a match, and gauges each player's odds of winning depending on how well or poorly they do in hitting these marks. Examples of Keys to the Match predictors include “Player 1 must win more than 63 percent of rallies that fall between four and nine shots” or “Player 2 must maintain a first serve percentage of at least 73 percent.”





