NTRP Rating
National Tennis
Rating Program (NTRP) Self-Rating Guidelines
General
Characteristics of Various Playing Levels
NB: Choose your self-rating based on your play when
you’re having a bad day, not a good one. Many players
who self rate and then have their rating confirmed, find
they over-rated themselves!
1.0:
This player is just starting to play tennis.
1.5:
This player has limited experience and is still working
primarily on getting the ball into play.
2.0:
This player needs on-court experience. This player has
obvious stroke weaknesses but is familiar with basic
positions for singles and doubles play.
2.5:
This player is learning to judge where the ball is going
although court coverage is weak. This player can sustain a
short rally of slow pacewith other players of the same
ability.
3.0:
This player is fairly consistent when hitting medium paced
shots, but is not comfortable with all strokes and lacks
execution when trying for directional control, depth, or
power. Most common doubles formation is one-up, one-back.
3.5:
This player has achieved improved stroke dependability with
directional control on moderate shots, but still lacks
depth and variety. This player exhibits more aggressive net
play, has improved court coverage, and is developing
teamwork in doubles.
4.0:
This player has dependable strokes, including directional
control and depth on both forehand and backhand sides on
moderate shots, plus the ability to use lobs, overheads,
approach shots and volleys with some success. This player
occasionally forces errors when serving. Rallies may be
lost due to impatience. Teamwork in doubles is evident.
4.5:
This player has begun to master the use of power and spins
and is beginning to handle pace, has sound footwork, can
control depth of shots, and is beginning to vary game plan
according to opponents. This player can hit first serves
with power and accuracy and place the second serve. This
player tends to over hit on difficult shots. Aggressive net
play is common in doubles.
5.0:
This player has good shot anticipation and frequently has
an outstanding shot or attribute around which a game may be
structured. This player can regularly hit winners or force
errors off of short balls and can put away volleys, can
successfully execute lobs, drop shots, half volleys,
over-head smashes, and has good depth and spin on most
second serves.
5.5:
This player has developed power and/or consistency as a
major weapon. This player can vary strategies and styles of
play in a competitive situation and hits dependable shots
in a stress situation.
6.0
to 7.0: These players
will generally not need NTRP ratings. Rankings or past
rankings will speak for themselves. The 6.0 player
typically has had intensive training for national
tournament competition at the junior and collegiate levels
and has obtained a sectional and/or national ranking. The
6.5 player has a reasonable chance of succeeding at the 7.0
level and has extensive satellite tournament experience.
The 7.0 is a world class player who is committed to
tournament competition on the international level and whose
major source of income is tournament prize
winnings.