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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! A tennis match is composed of points, games, and sets. A match is won as soon as a player or doubles pair wins the majority of prescribed sets, or reaches the prescribed total points in a tiebreak (usually extended if the total is reached without a two-point advantage). Traditionally, a match is the best of three sets (or five for men in a top-level tournament such as a Grand Slam, Davis Cup, or second-tier final). Doubles matches now commonly consist of two sets and, if required, a Match Tiebreak to ten points (or more as required to win by a…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! A tennis match is composed of points, games, and sets. A match is won as soon as a player or doubles pair wins the majority of prescribed sets, or reaches the prescribed total points in a tiebreak (usually extended if the total is reached without a two-point advantage). Traditionally, a match is the best of three sets (or five for men in a top-level tournament such as a Grand Slam, Davis Cup, or second-tier final). Doubles matches now commonly consist of two sets and, if required, a Match Tiebreak to ten points (or more as required to win by a two-point margin). Tennis scoring rests on the premise that serving is advantageous over receiving, hence it is only possible to win a set or match by 'breaking' (winning) the opponent's service game at least once, before a tiebreak is required. Likewise, it is not possible to win a tiebreak without winning at least one point during an opponent's turn at serve (called a 'mini-break').