BBC Sport has rolled out a new instalment of its tennis identification quiz, challenging fans to name a mystery tennis player using as few clues as possible. This edition is marked number four in the ongoing "Who am I?" series, which is designed to test how well tennis followers can recognise the sport's biggest names purely from a set of progressive hints.
How The Quiz Works
The format is simple by design. Participants get an initial attempt to identify the mystery player straight away. If that first guess is wrong, a new clue is unlocked, giving another piece of information to work with. This process repeats with every incorrect guess, so players keep receiving fresh clues until they either name the player correctly or run out of hints. The core idea is to correctly identify the tennis star while using as few clues as possible, since every additional clue taken chips away at the final score.
What Counts As A Good Score
BBC Sport has set out clear scoring benchmarks for this quiz. Correctly guessing the player within three clues is rated a good score. Solving it using just four or five points on offer is considered an exceptional result. In other words, the fewer clues a player needs before landing on the right answer, the stronger their final score turns out to be, rewarding sharp recall and genuine tennis knowledge over random guessing.
Who Put This Edition Together
The mystery player and the accompanying set of clues for this instalment were put together by BBC Sport's Huzaifah Khan. The "Who am I?" quiz has become a recurring interactive feature on BBC Sport, and with this instalment listed as the fourth in the series, it indicates that earlier editions have already been published, with the format likely to continue featuring different tennis stars in future instalments.













