Wager Mage
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143.0 mph Rank Player Speed 47 Nick Kyrgios 230.1 km/h (143.0 mph) Alexander Bublik 230.1 km/h (143.0 mph) 54 Martin Verkerk 230.0 km/h (142.9 mph) Roger Federer 230.0 km/h (142.9 mph) 56 more rows
One practical reason children are taught to draw before they paint is that drawing requires fewer materials, and when drawing with a pencil, it is...
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$24 If you box four horses, the cost for 100% of the dividend is $24 (4 x 3 x 2). The boxed first four costs more if you wish to include more...
Read More »This article lists serving speed record breaks for the men's and women's professional tennis. This list is not historically complete. For instance, not listed here, Roscoe Tanner's serve was clocked at 153 mph at Palm Springs in 1978 during the final against Raúl Ramírez. There are also reports that Bill Tilden had a serve that was clocked at 163.3 mph but there is nothing to verify that.[1] Also, Ellsworth Vines in the Wimbledon finals of 1932 clocked 121 mph (without Radar).[2] Udayachand Shetty's winning serve was clocked by radar at 120 mph using a wooden racquet, at the Gilbey Gins fast serve contest held in Chicago on 24 July 1976.[3] This qualified him to take part in the finals at the West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills Queens on 20 August 1976. Colin Dibley of Australia won the event with a serve of 130 mph.[4] Currently, the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) does not formally recognize service speed records made in Challenger tour events due to lack of uniformity in these tournaments' radar guns (including availability or lack thereof). Nevertheless, the serve speed of 263 km/h (163.4 mph) recorded by Australian Sam Groth at an ATP Challenger event in Busan, South Korea in May 2012 was measured using ATP-approved equipment and other data gathered appeared within a normal range. However, John Isner holds the ATP's official record for the fastest serve at 253 km/h (157.2 mph).[5] Reilly Opelka with a 233 km/h (144.8 mph) second serve in the quarterfinals of the 2021 Italian Open in Rome, holds the record for the fastest second serve ever recorded.[6] Multiple suspected errors in speed gun readings have been observed on ATP equipment. These include the recorded serves of John Isner at 4,718 km/h (2,931.6 mph),[7] Joao Sousa at 2,077 km/h (1,290.6 mph),[8] Denis Shapovalov at 424 km/h (263.5 mph),[9] Laslo Djere at 305 km/h (189.5 mph).[10]
A round robin styled tournament is where teams play one another an equal number of times, accumulating points as they win (or none if they lose)....
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A wager must have at least two selections, or “legs,” to be considered a parlay, with most betting sites setting the max number at 10 or 12 legs...
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Guide on how can police track you if you use VPN After further analysis, police will likely associate the IP address with a VPN service. Police...
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All results were compared against a brand new Titleist Pro V1 out of the sleeve. As you can see the data is almost identical. While I can't strike...
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Now you've got a 2-4-ace or a soft 17 hand. Bingo, you remember the rule that you should double down on soft 17 when dealer shows a 6. But hold on...
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It's really just soccer's name for spread betting, which is a bet on the margin of victory. The key difference is that it introduces fractions of...
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