Best Of Three

PODCAST · sports

Best Of Three

Alvin and friends discuss a wide variety of tennis topics, both on and off the court. 

  1. 111

    Jannik Sinner and the Problem the ATP Has Not Solved

    Jannik Sinner’s height is part of the story, but it is not the explanation. In this episode, Alvin and Torrey look at why Sinner has become such a difficult structural problem for the ATP: he combines elite movement, early ball-striking, return pressure, improved serving, and pattern discipline in a way that takes away an opponent’s preferred solutions.The central tactical breakdown focuses on Alexander Zverev. Sinner does not simply overpower Zverev; he attacks the movement relationship between Zverev’s backhand, forehand recovery, and court position. Once Zverev is forced into defensive open-stance backhands, Sinner can go behind him, change line, drop, or move forward before Zverev ever gets back into his preferred rhythm.The episode also looks ahead to Roland Garros and the profile of player who may eventually trouble Sinner: big enough to serve and hit through him, quick enough to move with him, and convicted enough to play first-strike tennis before Sinner starts solving the match. The final section turns to Hailey Baptiste’s Madrid win over Aryna Sabalenka, highlighting why Baptiste’s craft, touch, forehand shape, and clay-court comfort make the result more meaningful than a one-off upset.Send us Fan Mail

  2. 110

    Rafael Jódar and the ATP’s Next Tactical Separator

    Rafael Jódar has quickly moved from interesting young player to serious ATP prospect, but the reason is not simply his size or power. Alvin and Patrick break down why Jódar’s game already looks unusually mature: a clean backhand return, controlled rally shape, natural movement, and the ability to build points without redlining.The discussion compares Jódar with João Fonseca, Jakub Mensik, and Arthur Fils, focusing on the difference between raw shot-making and repeatable point construction. Patrick makes the strongest case for Jódar as a future top-tier ATP force, while Alvin keeps the projection grounded: Jódar belongs in the future-facing group, but Grand Slam relevance still depends on durability, adaptation, and best-of-five stamina.The episode also places Jódar within the larger Sinner-Alcaraz evolution. The next wave of players grew up watching that model, and Jódar may be one of the first prospects whose game reflects it with enough tactical clarity to eventually challenge it.Send us Fan Mail

  3. 109

    Chris Eubanks Explains What Tennis Fans Get Wrong About the Pro Level

    This is how pro tennis actually works.Former ATP Top 30 player Chris Eubanks breaks down: Why players don’t “just play bad”  What separates Top 10 from Top 50  How scouting reports actually work on tour  Why fans misunderstand players like Medvedev and Ben Shelton If you’ve ever watched tennis and felt like you were missing something—this is the explanation.Send us Fan Mail

  4. 108

    Ben Shelton’s Clay Evolution and Arthur Fils’ Pattern Identity

    This episode examines a significant developmental moment for two of the ATP Tour’s emerging contenders: Ben Shelton and Arthur Fils. Shelton’s title in Munich represents more than a milestone—it reflects meaningful progress in his ability to construct points on clay. The discussion focuses on his improved backhand stability, more disciplined rally tolerance, and the emergence of repeatable serve-plus-one patterns that translate beyond faster surfaces.Arthur Fils’ performance in Barcelona is framed as confirmation rather than breakthrough. His willingness to engage in forehand-to-forehand exchanges, even against the pace of Andrey Rublev, highlights a growing sense of pattern ownership. This is positioned as a critical step in developing a sustainable identity on clay, where point construction and shot tolerance are essential.The episode also contextualizes the broader developmental landscape, including younger players such as João Fonseca and Rafael Jodar, emphasizing the physical and structural demands of consistency at the tour level. On the WTA side, Elena Rybakina’s Stuttgart title reinforces the effectiveness of first-strike tennis, particularly in navigating matchup dynamics against elite defenders.Send us Fan Mail

  5. 107

    Jannik Sinner vs Carlos Alcaraz: Execution, Margin, and the Next Phase of a Rivalry

    This episode examines the latest installment in the evolving rivalry between Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz following Sinner’s straight-sets win in Monte Carlo. Rather than isolating the result, the discussion frames the matchup as part of a broader tactical progression—one defined by incremental adaptation, tightening margins, and increasing familiarity between two elite players.At the center of the analysis is the contrast between Sinner’s consistency and Alcaraz’s variability. Sinner’s baseline “floor” continues to apply sustained pressure, particularly through second-serve returns and disciplined court positioning. Alcaraz, while still generating more explosive opportunities, struggled to consistently complete attacking patterns, leaving openings for Sinner’s counterpunching. Over time, these small inefficiencies compound.Looking ahead, the episode positions the remainder of the clay season as a critical testing ground. For Alcaraz, the adjustments are clear: improve first-serve management, finish patterns with greater clarity, and redistribute risk within rallies. With Roland Garros approaching, the rivalry is entering a phase where execution—not talent—is becoming the deciding factor.Send us Fan Mail

  6. 106

    Belinda Bencic’s Backhand and the Real Demands of Clay Court Tennis

    Clay court tennis is often described as slower, but that simplification misses the deeper reality: the surface fundamentally reshapes how players manage space, construct points, and move through contact. In this episode, we break down the technical and tactical adjustments required to transition effectively from hard courts to clay.A central focus is movement—specifically the difference between sliding into the ball versus sliding after contact—and how this distinction impacts balance, recovery, and court positioning. Using Charleston as a reference point, we analyze players like Jessica Pegula and Madison Keys, whose games highlight the challenges of adapting to clay’s spatial demands.The episode also features a detailed examination of Belinda Bencic’s backhand. While biomechanically unconventional, her open-stance execution demonstrates how timing, efficiency, and discipline can outweigh traditional technique. We close by discussing Iga Świątek’s coaching change and what it could signal for the evolution of her already dominant clay-court identity.Send us Fan Mail

  7. 105

    Jannik Sinner and the New Tactical Standard in Men’s Tennis

    Jannik Sinner’s Miami title completes a dominant Sunshine Double and reinforces his position—alongside Carlos Alcaraz—as one of the defining forces in men’s tennis. This episode examines not just the results, but the underlying mechanics of Sinner’s success: a blend of precise ball striking, improved serve efficiency, and real-time tactical adaptability that is reshaping what it takes to compete at the top level.The discussion centers on the increasing difficulty of constructing points against Sinner. Beating him now requires a layered approach—early redirection, controlled variation of pace, and well-timed net pressure. Even then, success depends on executing all three simultaneously. This framework helps explain why players like Alexander Zverev, with their physical durability and completeness, are among the few credible challengers.Beyond the top tier, the episode situates Sinner within a broader tour structure. A clear hierarchy is emerging: two front-runners, a veteran group still capable of disruption, and a tightening middle tier led by rising players like Arthur Fils. Looking ahead to clay, the conversation highlights the pressure dynamics shaping the next phase of the season.Send us Fan Mail

  8. 104

    Coco Gauff, Aryna Sabalenka, and the Pressure of First-Strike Tennis

    This episode examines the evolving matchup between Coco Gauff and Aryna Sabalenka following Sabalenka’s Miami Open victory, using it as a lens to understand broader trends in the women’s game. Rather than framing Gauff as a player limited by technical inconsistencies, we position her as a uniquely constructed elite—an “overachieving counterpuncher” whose competitive resilience and adaptability allow her to consistently outperform the sum of her individual tools.In contrast, Sabalenka’s early-season form establishes her as the clear No. 1 force, defined by power, consistency, and improved composure. Yet this matchup reveals an asymmetric dynamic: Sabalenka must dictate and finish points, while Gauff thrives by extending rallies and creating discomfort. This places a subtle but meaningful psychological burden on Sabalenka, particularly in high-pressure moments.The conversation also explores the increasing depth of the WTA field, the instability beneath the top tier, and the tactical evolution of the modern game—especially the growing importance of return quality and the challenges of building reliable serve-plus-one patterns.Send us Fan Mail

  9. 103

    Sebastian Korda’s Blueprint vs Carlos Alcaraz

    Sebastian Korda’s win over Carlos Alcaraz in Miami serves as more than a standout result—it offers a tactical framework for competing against one of the sport’s most explosive players. In this episode, we analyze how Korda’s controlled aggression, early ball striking, and refusal to concede court position disrupted Alcaraz’s first-strike patterns. The discussion frames Korda not as an outlier, but as a model for a specific, emerging player archetype.From there, the conversation broadens into the evolution of modern tennis. We examine how advancements in physicality and equipment are compressing time and space on court, and why the next wave of elite players may increasingly resemble this “take time away” profile. The idea of “stacking good days” is introduced as a development philosophy, connecting technical execution with psychological stability.The episode closes with a wider lens on the sport itself—questioning format structures, the entertainment value of doubles, and whether tennis is approaching its physical and technological ceiling. Throughout, the Korda-Alcaraz match remains the anchor point for a deeper discussion about where the game is heading.Send us Fan Mail

  10. 102

    Alcaraz vs Fonseca, Świątek’s Confidence Dip, and Gauff’s Forehand Questions

    Carlos Alcaraz’s straight-set win over João Fonseca in Miami looks routine on paper, but the match offers a clearer view into the developmental gap between emerging talent and established elite. We break down what separates “competitive” from “threatening,” and why Fonseca’s current level should be evaluated with patience rather than projection.The conversation then shifts to Iga Świątek, who openly acknowledged her struggles following a three-set loss. We examine the tactical and psychological patterns behind her recent results, including how matches shift once opponents extend rallies and disrupt her early intensity.Finally, we take a detailed look at Coco Gauff’s forehand—specifically the interaction between grip, footwork, spacing, and court positioning. Rather than treating it as a single technical flaw, we outline the structural adjustments required for long-term stability at the highest level.Send us Fan Mail

  11. 101

    Sabalenka vs Rybakina and the Tactical Hierarchy Emerging After Indian Wells

    Indian Wells offered more than just two championship matches — it provided a revealing snapshot of how the tactical hierarchy of professional tennis is evolving.In the women’s final, Aryna Sabalenka’s victory over Elena Rybakina became a study in modern power rivalries. Both players generate elite pace and serve at the highest level, yet they apply pressure in fundamentally different ways. Sabalenka compresses time by striking early and relentlessly, forcing opponents into rushed decisions. Rybakina, by contrast, expands the court with depth and geometry, reclaiming time through positioning and controlled aggression. Their final ultimately turned on conditioning, clutch serving, and the ability to execute deep in the third set under extreme conditions.On the men’s side, Jannik Sinner’s win over Daniil Medvedev reinforced his continued evolution into one of the tour’s most consistent pressure players. The discussion also revisits Medvedev’s resurgence during the event, including the tactical discipline that allowed him to disrupt Carlos Alcaraz earlier in the tournament. The larger takeaway from Indian Wells: increasingly, it is clearly defined tactical identities — not just talent — that are determining who rises to the top of the sport.Send us Fan Mail

  12. 100

    Jannik Sinner vs João Fonseca — and the Pressure on Carlos Alcaraz

    Recorded during the middle of the Indian Wells tournament, this episode explores one of the most overlooked tactical questions in modern tennis: where should players actually stand on the court relative to their skill sets?Alvin Owusu and Torrey Hawkins begin with a coaching-level discussion of court positioning and time management. The ability to take the ball on the rise is often described as aggressive tennis, but the hosts explain that it is more accurately a product of swing efficiency, foot speed, and the ability to generate pace quickly. Using examples from the WTA Tour—including Jessica Pegula and Emma Raducanu—they illustrate how mechanics and leverage determine whether players can hold the baseline against elite opponents.The conversation then turns to current matches in Indian Wells, including Jannik Sinner’s win over João Fonseca. While Fonseca ultimately lost the match, the hosts discuss why the performance signaled legitimate top-tier potential. They also examine Sinner’s increasing willingness to take offensive risks in order to shorten physical matches against the sport’s best competitors.Finally, the episode closes with a discussion of Carlos Alcaraz and the psychological shift that occurs once a player becomes world No. 1. The challenge is no longer just winning matches—it is learning to carry the target that comes with being the benchmark for the entire sport.Send us Fan Mail

  13. 99

    Jean-Yves Aubone on Intense Tennis and the Push to Modernize Professional Tennis

    In this episode of the Best of Three podcast, Alvin Owusu and Torrey Hawkins sit down with Jean-Yves Aubone, Director of Player & Coach Relations for the Intense Tennis League. The conversation explores why a new format has emerged in response to longstanding structural challenges within professional tennis—from declining viewership to fragmented governance and unpredictable match scheduling.Aubone explains how Intense Tennis is designed to create a more accessible and entertainment-focused experience. Matches are capped at roughly 70 minutes and feature a shot clock, music during play, simplified scoring, and a unique rule where clean winners count for two points. The league also introduces in-match substitutions, fundamentally altering the strategic role of coaches and opening the door to new tactical possibilities.The discussion also examines how the format may reward a different player archetype—aggressive, versatile shot-makers capable of generating scoring bursts across singles, doubles, and mixed formats. More broadly, the group considers whether team identity and community engagement could help tennis develop deeper fan loyalty in the future.Send us Fan Mail

  14. 98

    Jack Draper’s Ceiling, Francis Tiafoe’s Window, and the Reality of a Serena Return

    With Miami approaching, we assess three players at very different stages of leverage.Jack Draper, now 24, already owns a Masters 1000 title and deep Slam credentials. The gap between him and sustained Top 5 status is narrower than it appears. This episode breaks down the marginal gains conversation — specifically how one additional free point per service game alters ranking math, physical load, and match control. Talent is not the question. Durability and serve efficiency are.Francis Tiafoe’s run to the Acapulco final reintroduces a familiar presence at the elite level. But at 28, relevance requires structural consistency against Top 10 opponents. We examine whether this resurgence is emotional, physical, or built on tactical adjustments.We close with measured discussion around Serena Williams speculation. At 44, what would a comeback signify within the physiological and competitive realities of the modern tour?Show NotesKey ThemesServe leverage and ranking mathDurability vs ceilingDefining “relevance” at the elite levelEmotional vs structural resurgenceLegacy vs competitive logisticsTactical HighlightsServe +1 efficiency (Draper)Lefty geometry and backhand reinforcementTop 10 win percentage benchmarks (Tiafoe)Match vs Tour physical demand discussionCoach’s Corner“One Free Point Per Game”How marginal serve gains impact ranking trajectoryApplication for high-level juniors and college playersPlayer & Tournament ContextJack Draper – Miami returnFrancis Tiafoe – Acapulco finalistSerena Williams – comeback speculationSend us Fan Mail

  15. 97

    Carlos Alcaraz’s Depth Revolution & Jessica Pegula’s Sustainable Ceiling

    Carlos Alcaraz’s Doha title signals more than form — it signals evolution. We analyze how his depth control, tempo manipulation, and backhand assertion are redefining his dominance. His ability to gain time without sacrificing position may be the clearest modern separator at the top of the men’s game.Jessica Pegula’s Dubai win presents a different model of excellence. Her “net-neutral” construction — no wasted movement, no volatility, no structural weaknesses — allows her game to travel week to week. Her ceiling is not explosive, but repeatable.We also examine Jakub Mensik’s directional boldness, Arthur Fils’ stabilization, and a measured but serious assessment of Coco Gauff. The concern isn’t ranking. It’s technical direction — and whether elite players can recalibrate mechanics without stepping off the tour.Send us Fan Mail

  16. 96

    WTA Doha 1000 Recap: Muchova Breaks Through, Mboko Arrives, and the Next Gen Is Here

    The WTA Doha 1000 wrapped up with one of the most satisfying storylines of the season. Karolína Muchová wins her first WTA title in six years, Vicky Mboko announces herself as a top-10 player, and the next generation keeps forcing its way into the conversation.Alvin Owusu and Torrey Hawkins break down what we learned from Doha, why Muchová’s all-court game still causes matchup problems at the top of the game, and what makes Mboko so difficult to deal with already. We also zoom out to talk about the WTA’s youth surge, scheduling pressures after the Australian Open, and what tournament organizers should be paying attention to as stars pick and choose their calendars.Plus: thoughts on Coco Gauff’s early exit, Maria Sakkari’s resurgence, Qinwen Zheng’s return, and why the women’s tour might be healthier than it’s ever been—despite fewer “automatic” stars showing up every week.Send us Fan Mail

  17. 95

    Alcaraz’s Genius, Zverev’s Window & Sinner’s Response | Post Australian Open Breakdown

    The Australian Open is in the books, and we’re joined by Patrick Parr for a wide-ranging post-AO conversation that goes well beyond the scoreboard.We unpack Alexander Zverev’s durability and why the French Open may represent his clearest Grand Slam opportunity, examine Carlos Alcaraz’s unmatched in-match adaptability, and break down why Jannik Sinner’s loss doesn’t change his long-term trajectory.We also dive into the next generation of American men — including Lerner Tien and Ben Shelton — and debate whether court sense or raw power is harder to acquire at the elite level. Along the way, we touch on junk ballers, crowd dynamics, fitness myths, and why tennis careers evolve in distinct phases.This is a practitioner’s conversation for tennis fans who want context, not just results.Send us Fan Mail

  18. 94

    Australian Open 2026 Recap: What We Learned About Alcaraz, Rybakina, Zverev & the Tours

    The Australian Open is in the books, and we zoom out on what actually mattered.In this episode of Best of Three, we break down what the 2026 Australian Open told us about the state of both tours — from Aryna Sabalenka’s continued dominance and the growing depth of the WTA, to Carlos Alcaraz’s separation at the top of the men’s game and what this tournament revealed about Alexander Zverev, Jannik Sinner, and the next generation.We also dig into:Whether the women’s tour is more open than everHow close Zverev really is to a Grand SlamCarlos Alcaraz vs the field — how big is the gap?ESPN’s Australian Open coverage and broadcast evolutionBest-of-five debates, surface homogenization, and what (if anything) tennis should changeSmart tennis conversation, no rankings obsession — just the storylines that actually matter.Send us Fan Mail

  19. 93

    Carlos Alcaraz Wins Australian Open 2026 | Beating Djokovic with Brains, Legs & Legacy

    Carlos Alcaraz defeats Novak Djokovic in four sets to win the Australian Open and complete the career Grand Slam before age 23.In this episode of Best of Three, we break down:Why this wasn’t a simple passing of the torchHow Alcaraz adjusted tactically after a brutal first setThe height, depth, and footwork changes that flipped the matchWhy Djokovic still forced Alcaraz to play his absolute bestThis wasn’t about flash — it was about discipline, legs, and playing the long game.Send us Fan Mail

  20. 92

    Elena Rybakina is your 2026 Australian Open Champion

    Elena Rybakina is your 2026 Australian Open Champion, defeating Aryna Sabalenka in a razor-thin three-set final (6-4, 4-6, 6-4).Alvin and Torrey break down one of the highest-level women’s finals in recent memory:• why this match truly was a coin flip (92 points apiece)• first-strike tennis vs high-tempo rally dominance• the tactical adjustments that swung the third set• what this result means for the WTA hierarchy heading into the hard-court sprint• Rybakina’s resurgence, Sabalenka’s consistency, and where the rivalry goes nextThis was elite tennis decided by margins, movement, and mindset.Send us Fan Mail

  21. 91

    Australian Open 2026 Mens Semis Recap: Djokovic Survives Sinner, Alcaraz Outlasts Zverev

    Novak Djokovic delivers another reminder at the Australian Open, surviving an all-time semifinal battle with Jannik Sinner, while Carlos Alcaraz ALSO outlasts Alexander Zverev in a five-set war.Alvin Owusu and Torrey Hawkins break down belief, execution under pressure, break-point math, serving patterns, and legacy implications—plus what this all means heading into the men’s final.This wasn’t just tennis. This was history knocking.Send us Fan Mail

  22. 90

    Sabalenka vs Rybakina Final Set | Coco Gauff Concerns | AO 2026 Women’s QF & SF Breakdown

    The women’s side of the Australian Open is delivering heavyweight tennis.We break down:• Sabalenka’s dominance and why she’s in a class of her own• Elena Rybakina surviving Pegula and setting up the final we’ve been waiting for• Coco Gauff’s loss to Svitolina – what’s real, what’s fixable, what matters long-term• Why 18-year-old Eva Jovic is very different from the usual “next American” hype• What Jessica Pegula’s consistency really means in today’s power eraPower vs power. Control vs chaos. Experience vs momentum.This is the full women’s QF + SF review heading into the final.🎾 Best of Three is tennis talk for people who actually watch the points.Send us Fan Mail

  23. 89

    Australian Open 2026 Men’s QF Review & SF Preview | Djokovic, Sinner, Alcaraz, Zverev |

    We break down the men’s quarterfinals at the 2026 Australian Open and preview the semifinals.Topics include:Djokovic vs Musetti (and what it says about Novak in 2026)Sinner vs Shelton and the “wrong generation” problemAlcaraz vs de Minaur breakdownZverev vs TienWhy Alcaraz and Sinner are separating from the fieldWhat kind of player can actually disrupt them🎾 Hosted by Alvin Owusu & Torrey Hawkins — former players, longtime coaches, and tennis lifers.Send us Fan Mail

  24. 88

    Australian Open 2026 R16 Review & Quarterfinal Preview

    The Round of 16 is in the books at the 2026 Australian Open, and now the real fun begins.Alvin and Torrey break down the women’s and men’s quarterfinal matchups, starting with Aryna Sabalenka’s form and the rapid rise of Eva Jovic, then moving through Coco Gauff vs Elina Svitolina and the evolving ceiling of Mirra Andreeva.On the men’s side, we dig deep into Carlos Alcaraz vs Alex de Minaur, what “changing gears” actually means at the elite level, why Tommy Paul struggled to hurt Carlos, and how players like De Minaur, Bublik, and others match up stylistically as the tournament tightens.This is the business end of the tournament — tactics, patterns, ceilings, and pressure.If you enjoy thoughtful, practitioner-level tennis analysis, you’re in the right place.Send us Fan Mail

  25. 87

    Australian Open 2026: Rounds 1–2 Breakdown | Next Gen Reality Check + Early Contenders

    We break down the first two rounds of the 2026 Australian Open on both the ATP and WTA tours.From why the top seeds largely survived, to what the early exits of several Next Gen players really mean, to the subtle differences between tour professionals and rising talent — this episode goes deep on what actually matters after Week 1 in Melbourne.Topics include:• Why Grand Slams expose young players differently than regular tour events  • Fonseca & Alex Eala’s early exits and what to make of them  • Serve development as the real separator on tour  • Madison Keys, Pegula, and the American litmus test  • Crowd dynamics at the Happy Slam  • Men’s draw chalk and what it sets up for the Round of 32  • Early thoughts on Tiafoe vs De Minaur, Zverev vs Norrie, Shelton’s form, and more  🎾 Hosted by Alvin Owusu & Torrey Hawkins  Send us Fan Mail

  26. 86

    Australian Open 2026 Draw Show | Full Breakdown

    The 2026 tennis season is officially underway, and we’re kicking it off with our full Australian Open Draw Show.In this episode of Best of Three, we break down:• The women’s draw first – contenders, dangerous floaters, and early-round landmines• The men’s draw second – blockbuster first rounds, brutal sections, and who really got tested• Which seeds are vulnerable• Which unseeded players could blow things up• And what the draw tells us about how this tournament might actually unfoldIf you’re filling out a bracket, losing sleep over first-round matchups, or just love tournament strategy, this one’s for you.🎾 Hosted by Alvin Owusu & Torrey HawkinsSubscribe for weekly tennis conversations, tournament previews, and deep dives from players and coaches who live the sport.Send us Fan Mail

  27. 85

    The State of American Women’s Tennis (2025) – Who’s Next After Coco, Pegula & Anisimova?

    American women’s tennis is quietly stacked—and complicated.In this special State of the Union episode of Best of Three, Alvin Owusu and Torrey Hawkins break down where US women’s tennis really stands heading into the new season.They dig into:Coco Gauff’s evolution into a consistent Grand Slam force (and what still limits her ceiling)Amanda Anisimova’s comeback year, mental toughness, and why her pedigree mattersJessica Pegula’s consistency, her realistic Grand Slam window, and what her next phase looks likeWhy development curves matter more than rankings aloneWhich young Americans are trending toward the top 10—and which might be leveling outThe importance of early winning, time on tour, and making real adjustments to your gameWhy players like Eva Jovovich and Ashlyn Krueger could change the conversationWhat separates “top-50 good” from true championship contendersThis isn’t hot-take tennis talk. It’s a coach-level, long-arc conversation about development, pressure, injuries, money, confidence, and what it actually takes to win at the highest level.If you care about the future of American tennis—or just love understanding how elite players are built—this one goes deep.Send us Fan Mail

  28. 84

    US Tennis State of the Union: Who’s Carrying the Torch After Fritz, Tiafoe & Paul?

    American men’s tennis looks stable at the top — but stability isn’t the same as momentum.In this State of the Union episode, Alvin and Torrey take a wide-angle look at where U.S. men’s tennis stands heading into the next season. They break down the established core (Taylor Fritz, Tommy Paul, Frances Tiafoe), assess Ben Shelton’s rapid ascent, and ask the harder question: what happens after this generation?The conversation spans ceiling vs. longevity, talent vs. professionalism, and why depth alone doesn’t solve the problem. They also dig into emerging names like Learner Tien and Ethan Quinn, debate wild cards like Jensen Brooksby, and define the “worry line” that quietly separates contenders from placeholders.This isn’t rankings talk. It’s about trajectory, pressure, and who actually has the tools — mentally and physically — to push American tennis forward.Send us Fan Mail

  29. 83

    Jannik Sinner’s Skiing Background Explains Everything

    Why does Jannik Sinner feel inevitable—especially indoors?In this episode of Best of Three, Alvin Owusu is joined by Patrick Parr for a deep dive into what actually separates Sinner from the rest of the ATP field. This isn’t about forehands or backhands. It’s about skiing, pressure, stillness, and why tennis feels slow to him.We unpack:How Sinner’s elite skiing background shaped his movement, balance, and mental calmWhy indoor tennis removes chaos—and why that heavily favors SinnerThe difference between Sinner’s inward focus and Alcaraz’s crowd-fed chaosWhy long rallies don’t drain Sinner—they settle himHow other sports (soccer, basketball, squash, boxing) quietly shape elite tennis playersWhat it might take for the next generation to disrupt Sinner’s dominanceThis conversation goes beyond rankings and trophies. It’s about how athletes are built, not just trained—and why some players feel unshakeable once they lock in.🎧 Best of Three is a tennis podcast for fans who want to understand the game more deeply—from tactics to psychology to the weird paths that create greatness.Send us Fan Mail

  30. 82

    The Pressure Generation | ATP 2025 Review Part 4

    In Part 4 of our ATP 2025 Year-End Review, we look at the players aged 27–29 — the most complicated group in men’s tennis. They were supposed to take over from Djokovic, Nadal, and Federer. Then came The New Two.We dive into:• Zverev’s stagnant ceiling and why the next dip could get ugly• Fritz maximizing every ounce but needing just one more gear• Medvedev’s “one more run” and what actual change looks like• Tsitsipas falling fast — is a comeback even realistic?• Rublev as the gatekeeper fighting off the kids behind himThis isn’t the future. This is now, and this era might define whether the ATP becomes a true three-tier fight — contenders, chasers, and casualties.Send us Fan Mail

  31. 81

    The New Middle Class of Men’s Tennis | ATP 2025 Review Part 3

    What is a tennis player’s prime anymore? This week, we dig into the emerging “middle class” on the ATP Tour — the 25–26 year olds who are stepping into the best years of their tennis lives. Alex de Minaur, Félix Auger-Aliassime, Casper Ruud, Denis Shapovalov, Alejandro Davidovich Fokina — where are they headed in 2026 and beyond?We break down:• The science and mythology of peak vs prime in tennis• Why longevity has shifted the curve into weird territory• Who among this group has another level to unlock• Who is at risk of getting passed by the next wave• Why this cohort may set the tone for the ATP’s future depthPrime isn’t guaranteed… it must be defended.Send us Fan Mail

  32. 80

    Shelton, Draper, Rune & the “Blocked Generation” | ATP 2025 Review - Part 2

    What if you were good enough to be a Grand Slam contender… in any other era?Part 2 of our ATP Year-End Review looks at the players aged 22–24 — the cohort stuck directly behind Alcaraz and Sinner. This is the group that knows the assignment: solve the best duo men’s tennis has seen in 20 years… or sit in the waiting room forever.We dive into:• Ben Shelton — the competitive mutant who has climbed faster than his skill set was “supposed” to  • Flavio Cobolli — burning competitive fire plus a late-season breakout that changes everything  • Jack Draper — elite results, still searching for the identity that unlocks it all  • Holger Rune — consistency is nice… but where are the big Slam runs?  Plus the truth they all face: there’s no “waiting out” the top anymore. The future is happening in real time.Send us Fan Mail

  33. 79

    The Future of Men’s Tennis: ATP Young Guns Breakdown | ATP 2025 Review - Part 1

    The men’s game is finally entering a new era — and the heat is coming from below. Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner may be the “new two” at the top of the ATP mountain, but the base has started to rumble. In this episode, Torrey and Alvin break down the youngest wave of challengers ready to push the sport forward.We dig into the rapid rise of Learner Tien, the firepower of João Fonseca, the big-man upside of Jakub Mensik, and the smooth-handed swagger of Alex Michelsen. What did each show us in 2025? And who actually has the goods to force the future to arrive sooner?Along the way we talk:– Why Davis Cup reminded us the tour is deeper than headlines let on  – Why Mensik’s Miami run raised expectations… and pressure  – Whether Fonseca avoids the Rublev plateau  – How Tien can skyrocket just by adding a serve  – What Michelsen must learn now that he’s among the big boys  Can anyone touch the top in the next 24 months? We make our predictions and put the stopwatch on the future.Send us Fan Mail

  34. 78

    WTA 2025 Review: A New Big Three? Sabalenka, Gauff, Swiatek

    The 2025 WTA season is in the books, and it might be the clearest sign yet that women’s tennis has officially entered a new era. Arena Sabalenka finished as the undisputed force at the top, Coco Gauff found another gear, Amanda Anisimova became a two-slam finalist, and a wave of young talent made serious noise.Alvin and Torrey break down:• Why Sabalenka’s “Serena 2.0” season was both dominant and revealing• Whether Coco Gauff actually has another level — and what that could mean for 2026• The case for Amanda Anisimova as a true long-term contender• Players poised to break into the Top 8 next year (Mirra Andreeva, Qinwen Zheng, Naomi Osaka…?)• Who’s rising, who’s falling, and why style matchups matter more than ever• Stock Up / Stock Down• Our favorite matches and storylines of the yearSend us Fan Mail

  35. 77

    ATP Tour Finals Breakdown: Sinner’s Edge, Alcaraz’s Ceiling, and What’s Next | Ep. 76

    Sinner vs Alcaraz delivered again.We dive deep into the ATP Tour Finals—tactics, momentum swings, psychological edges, and why this rivalry already feels historic. We also zoom out to the full field: Felix resurging, Ben chasing the top tier, De Minuar’s rise, Fritz finding his ceiling, and what all of this means heading into Australia.If you’re a tennis nerd, settle in. If you’re not, you will be by the end.Send us Fan Mail

  36. 76

    WTA Finals Review: Rybakina Just Sent A Message | Ep. 75

    Elena Rybakina just put the entire women’s tour on notice.In Riyadh she didn’t just win — she took time away from the biggest hitters in the sport, went coast-to-coast, and made a real case that we have a new tier forming at the top.In this episode we break down what makes Rybakina’s game so suffocating, how she’s evolved tactically, why her compact mechanics change the geometry of rallies, and what this week tells us about the next four years in women’s tennis.Then we pivot to the men — because the ATP Finals actually matter this year — and we get into the Musetti chaos, Felix’s re-emergence, and Novak’s mid-tournament “I’m not going to Turin” moment.If you love the sport at a technical and narrative level — this one is a feast.Send us Fan Mail

  37. 75

    Sinner Isn’t Hot… He’s Inevitable. | Paris Masters Recap + WTA Finals Check-In | Ep. 74

    The indoor swing keeps delivering clarity.Jannik Sinner beats Felix Auger-Aliassime in Paris… and again shows he isn’t just in form — he’s becoming the constraint the entire ATP field has to solve. His time-pressuring geometry is the new standard. Felix keeps showing progress, but the gap between “great ball” and “Sinner/Carlos OS level” was on display.We also connect this to the upcoming Turin Finals and what’s actually at stake — not points — but era momentum.Then we go to the WTA side: the matchups and early reads from the year-end Finals. The difference between the big hitters’ group and the movers’ group. And why this week is an early preview for 2025 identity.This episode is about the future direction of the tours — through the lens of Paris.👟 ATP PARIS takeaway: Sinner is not just winning — he’s defining the future🎾 Felix is close — but his “operating system” needs a leap to compete with the two at the top🔥 WTA Finals takeaway: weapons + problem solving will rule this week indoors—subscribe to the show.follow on instagram @bestofthreepodcastSend us Fan Mail

  38. 74

    WTA Finals Set: Rybakina’s Rise, Saudi Masters & Tiafoe’s Reset | Ep. 73

    The 2025 WTA Finals field is locked. Alvin and Torrey unpack the storylines behind the top eight — from Sabalenka’s dominance to Gauff’s consistency and Rybakina’s late run. They also react to the ATP’s new Masters 1000 event in Saudi Arabia and discuss what Frances Tiafoe’s latest coaching split says about his future on tour.(Bonus “WTA 1–5” segment available on YouTube.)Send us Fan Mail

  39. 73

    Six Kings Slam or Six Kings SHAM? | Why Tennis Exhibitions Miss the Mark | Ep. 72

    Alvin and Patrick dive into the “Six Kings Slam” — the Netflix-streamed exhibition in Saudi Arabia that paid six of the world’s best players $1.5 million each to show up. They debate whether events like this help or hurt the sport, what makes exhibitions feel hollow, and why true stakes are the lifeblood of tennis.Later, they hit on how exhibitions could actually work, the future of Laver Cup vs. Davis Cup, and finish with early thoughts on the ATP and WTA year-end finals.Send us Fan Mail

  40. 72

    Ep. 71: WTA Top 25 of the 2000s Era: 10 – 6 -- The Vacuum Queens & Modern Giants

    Alvin and Torrey are back to crack open the Top 10 of the WTA’s last 25 years—and things are getting heated.From Clijsters vs Osaka to Barty’s brief reign, Davenport’s underrated run, Sabalenka’s rise, and Hingis’s forgotten dominance—this one dives into the eras that shaped the modern women’s game.We’re ranking the Top 25 WTA players of 2000–2025, debating each pick live, no notes, and no safety nets. Expect passionate disagreements, some historical context, and a few hot takes you’ll want to argue with in the comments.🎾 Hosts: Alvin Owusu & Torrey Hawkins🎙️ Series: WTA Top 25 of the 2000s Era (2000–2025)📅 Episode: Part 5 — Ranks #10 through #6Send us Fan Mail

  41. 71

    Ep. 70: Asia Swing: Novak’s Turning Point, Valentin’s Rise, and Coco’s Command

    Alvin and Torrey are back for another late-night edition of Best of Three, breaking down an action-packed two weeks of tennis in Asia.They unpack Valentin Vacherot’s improbable Shanghai Masters title, what it reveals about Novak Djokovic’s future, and why Father Time may finally be knocking. Then the guys pivot to the women’s side, revisiting Amanda Anisimova’s Beijing run, Coco Gauff’s dominant Wuhan title, and the razor-close parity that makes women’s tennis such a compelling product heading into the WTA Finals in Riyadh.Also: Medvedev’s quiet consistency, the new wave of depth on the ATP Tour, and how tennis remains one of the few global languages uniting fans around the world.Send us Fan Mail

  42. 70

    Ep. 69: WTA Top 25 of the 2000s Era: 15–11

    The countdown continues! Alvin and Torrey move into the meat of the WTA Top 25 of the 2000s Era — players ranked 15 through 11. The conversation dives deep into what defined greatness in women’s tennis during this golden quarter-century: sustained excellence, comebacks, and the underrated brilliance of several multi-slam champions.They revisit Victoria Azarenka’s intensity, Lindsay Davenport’s quiet dominance, Jennifer Capriati’s turbulent brilliance, Angelique Kerber’s counter-punching artistry, Ash Barty’s early exit on top, Naomi Osaka’s hard-court takeover, and Kim Clijsters’ timeless resurgence.This episode captures not just stats but stories — how each player shaped the era and left a mark that can still be felt today.Send us Fan Mail

  43. 69

    Ep. 68: BONUS EPISODE: Seeing Carlos Alcaraz Live — Pat Parr on Presence, Boredom, and Brilliance

    Writer and tennis observer Patrick Parr joins Alvin fresh off watching Carlos Alcaraz vs Casper Ruud at the Japan Open. From '87 MJ comparisons to existential boredom, they unpack what makes Alcaraz’s tennis so magnetic—and what happens when the crowd isn’t on his side.They also wander through Ben Shelton’s rise, the soul of indoor tennis, and who deserves to make the Turin Finals.Best of Three Podcast explores tennis with equal parts curiosity and storytelling.🎾 Follow us on Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube @BestOfThreePodSend us Fan Mail

  44. 68

    Ep. 67: Schedules, Sustainability, and Saying Goodbye: Tennis in Transition

    Alvin and Torrey are back after a short break, catching up on the fall tennis swing between Beijing, Tokyo, and Shanghai. The guys dive deep into the growing debate over scheduling — why Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner may start playing fewer events, how player longevity is at odds with the tour’s demands, and what sustainability in professional tennis really looks like.They debate whether players should push back against longer draws and jam-packed calendars, compare tennis to other sports leagues, and even imagine what a commissioner could do for the game. The conversation touches on prize money incentives, legacy versus earnings, and the real leverage the top stars hold.Finally, the episode turns personal as Alvin and Torrey reflect on the career of Gaël Monfils, celebrating his retirement as one of the sport’s great entertainers and storytellers.Send us Fan Mail

  45. 67

    Ep. 66: Top 25 WTA Players of the Last 25 Years | #20-16 Breakdown

    The countdown continues! In this episode, Alvin and Torrey break down spots 20 through 16 on their list of the greatest WTA players since the year 2000.From Slam champions to former World No. 1s, this stretch includes players who dominated, divided opinion, and defined the era. The hosts debate the legacies of Garbiñe Muguruza, Caroline Wozniacki, Victoria Azarenka, Coco Gauff, and Simona Halep — analyzing their peaks, their resumes, and their place in the modern game.👟 Did Wozniacki do enough with her time at No. 1?🎯 Is Muguruza’s prime underrated?🔥 Has Gauff already earned her place on this list?Drop your takes, and stay tuned for #15–11 next week.—🎧 Subscribe + review to support the show🌐 bo3pod.com | @bestofthreepod📺 YouTube for full video episodes + clipsSend us Fan Mail

  46. 66

    Ep. 65: Top 25 WTA Players of the Last 25 Years | #25–21 Breakdown

    In this special countdown series, Alvin and Torrey start unveiling their picks for the Top 25 WTA players of the last 25 years. This episode covers spots #25 through #21, where the debates get spicy and the resumes get complicated.🧮 The rules? Career peaks after 2000, pretend they’re all retired today, and no hiding behind recency bias. Expect some wild cards, some all-time class acts, and a little bit of love for the lefties.👟 Who makes the cut between Mary Pierce and Coco Gauff? And how do you weigh potential vs. production?🧠 Get your own rankings ready—we’re just getting started.📩 Drop your picks for 25–21 in the comments or tag us on Instagram!Send us Fan Mail

  47. 65

    Ep. 64: Alcaraz and Sinner are redefining the concept of rivalry in tennis w/Patrick Parr

    SummaryIn this episode, Alvin and Patrick discuss the recent US Open, reflecting on the performances of top players like Novak Djokovic, Carlos Alcaraz, and Jannik Sinner. They delve into the evolving rivalry between Alcaraz and Sinner, the impact of psychological factors in their matches, and the significance of crowd dynamics. The conversation also touches on the future of men's tennis, emerging talents, and the role of literature in capturing the essence of these rivalries. The episode concludes with a light-hearted discussion about potential walk-up songs for players, adding a fun twist to the serious analysis.Send us Fan Mail

  48. 64

    Ep. 63: Carlos Alcaraz and Aryna Sabalenka are your 2025 US Open Champions | US Open Finals Review

    The US Open 2025 is in the books — and what a finish! 🎾Carlos Alcaraz and Aryna Sabalenka claimed the men’s and women’s titles, delivering statement wins that felt like a defining moment in tennis.In this episode of Best of Three, Alvin and Torrey break down:Alcaraz’s tactical brilliance against Jannik Sinner and how he’s elevating the rivalry.Why Sabalenka’s consistency and finals experience carried her past Amanda Anisimova.The rise of new contenders like Anisimova, Coco Gauff, and Emma Navarro in a deep women’s field.How the men’s game is being redefined by the Alcaraz–Sinner rivalry.What this US Open means for the next chapter of tennis.👉 If you love tennis talk that mixes strategy, storylines, and fan energy — you’re in the right place.Don’t forget to subscribe and join the conversation in the comments!Send us Fan Mail

  49. 63

    Ep. 62: US Open Semifinal Review | Anisimova vs. Osaka, Sabalenka vs. Pegula, Alcaraz vs. Djokovic, Sinner vs. Auger-Aliassime

    The semifinals delivered everything — from Osaka and Anisimova trading blows to Sabalenka surviving Pegula in a three-set battle. We break down the tactics, mindset shifts, and razor-thin margins that defined both women’s matches, then look ahead to a blockbuster final: Anisimova vs. Sabalenka.On the men’s side, we unpack Felix’s resurgence against Sinner, Djokovic’s struggles against Father Time, and why Alcaraz continues to look like the future of the sport. Plus: what Novak’s comments really mean, and whether we’re witnessing a full torch passing moment.Send us Fan Mail

  50. 62

    Ep. 61: US Open QFs Recap & SF Preview: Alcaraz–Djokovic Set, Felix Rising, Pegula–Sabalenka, Osaka - Anisimova

    The US Open is down to its final four — and the storylines are sizzling. Alvin and Torrey ask: can anyone slow down Alcaraz? Is Djokovic still the problem no one can solve? And is Felix finally ready to break through against Sinner? On the women’s side, Amanda Anisimova shocks Świątek, Pegula cruises into a heavyweight clash with Sabalenka, and the depth of the field has never looked stronger. Big shots, bigger questions — and a semifinal lineup you won’t want to miss.Send us Fan Mail

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

Alvin and friends discuss a wide variety of tennis topics, both on and off the court.

HOSTED BY

Best Of Three Productions

URL copied to clipboard!