I have just been listening to an episode of 'Three' which discusses Learner Tien and his potential, especially in comparison to Joao Fonseca. Here's a summary of the main points for anyone who is interested.
Amy Lundy: Tien is an incredible mover, solid off both wings, his serve is a work in progress. He himself said that he doesn’t want to grind himself into a pulp and he needs to figure out a way to win more free points with his serve. Likely that he needs to work more on placement and spin than power. He picks things up quickly and is committed to improvement.
Joel Drucker: Quoted another analyst who described Tien as ‘a needler and a meddler.’ He takes the ball early, takes the pace off the ball, uses tactics and variety to disrupt his opponent.
Gill Gross: Tien had an insane win streak last year on the Challenger circuit, won 3 Challenger titles. Run to R4 at AO. Two top 5 wins already over Medvedev and Zverev (although notes the illness factor with Zverev and the Acapulco win). 19 years old, #83. Interesting to compare him with Fonseca - the instinct is to put a little bit of a ceiling on Tien because he doesn’t have big weapons, but is that fair?
Joel Druckner: Not fair to either of them to make comparisons or predictions at this stage of their career.
Amy Lundy: Saw a scouting report that advised that the best strategy to beat Fonseca currently is to rally to his FH, Strengths can also be weaknesses, tennis is a game of errors and Fonseca is making more errors right now. Tien makes very few errors. Both great players, difficult to see the future.
Gill Gross: The highlight reel with Fonseca is intoxicating, which matters in terms of popularity and hype… Overall, more potential in a young player with easy power who misses a lot, as long as they have the right mentality, compared to a player who is very consistent but damaging their opponent doesn’t come easily to them. For whatever reason, the more consistent player can often have better mental traits. Fonseca is very good mentally, so trusts him to improve the areas that need improving in his game. Acknowledges Fonseca has one of the most error-prone FHs in the world, but not concerned about that longterm…
Makes a comparison between Medvedev and Tien, the obvious discrepancy being their height. Medvedev had a weapon in his 1st serve but he was ‘a needler and a meddler’, most of his game being about defence and tactics and moving his opponent around the court. Tien is like Medvedev, if you take away the serve and add a more offensive FH and the ability to come forward to the net more…
Tien seems to be a very good competitor, his decision making and tennis IQ are incredible, he has the ability to apply pressure and not miss.