Match analytics

Alexander Zverev vs Daniel Altmaier · Match odds & ELO prediction

Munich • Clay • Apr 16, 2025 • 1:45 PM

Clay

Final score

2 - 0

Winner Alexander Zverev

Key insights

Player performance profile

Alexander Zverev

HARDSmall sample

50% · 11 on hard

Games won (last 10)

53%

10 matches tracked

Player Skillset

Based on ~12,343 points across 79 matches

Serve strengthServe strength (Player serve win % - tour average serve win %) scaled by sample size
Elite
4.796% Pctl
Return strengthReturn strength (Player return win % - tour average return win %) scaled by sample size
Solid
-1.265% Pctl
Pressure IndexPressure Index (Break point performance - baseline point performance) with a small adjustment for tiebreak results
Solid
+0.351% Pctl
Tiebreak win %
Strong
63%79% Pctl

Percentiles compare against tour-level players in TennisTrove.

Daniel Altmaier

HARDSmall sample

0% · 01 on hard

Games won (last 10)

43%

10 matches tracked

Player Skillset

Based on ~9,370 points across 59 matches

Serve strengthServe strength (Player serve win % - tour average serve win %) scaled by sample size
Vulnerable
-1.022% Pctl
Return strengthReturn strength (Player return win % - tour average return win %) scaled by sample size
Vulnerable
-3.613% Pctl
Pressure IndexPressure Index (Break point performance - baseline point performance) with a small adjustment for tiebreak results
Solid
+2.773% Pctl
Tiebreak win %
Solid
52%56% Pctl

Percentiles compare against tour-level players in TennisTrove.

Match Overview

Alexander Zverev and Daniel Altmaier are set to meet at the Munich on April 16, 2025 in a clay-court singles match. Zverev enters with a 18–7 record on clay courts in 2025, while Altmaier has posted a 13–8 mark on clay courts this season. Elo ratings point to a clear statistical advantage for Altmaier entering this matchup. In their head-to-head history, Zverev leads 3–1 over Altmaier, including a win in their most recent meeting.

Recent singles form slightly favors Zverev, who has won 4 of his last five matches, while Altmaier has gone 1–4 over the same span.