In the top tennis tournaments there is a limited instant-replay system.  When a player disagrees with a call (or non-call) made by a linesman, he can request an instant-replay review.  The system is limited because the players begin with a fixed number of challenges and every incorrect challenge deducts one from that number.  As a result there is a lot of strategy involved in deciding when to make a challenge.

Alongside the challenge system is a vestige of the old review system where the chair umpire can unilaterally over-rule a call made by the linesman.  These over-rules must come immediately and so they always precede the players’ decision whether to challenge, and this adds to the strategic element.

Suppose that A’s shot lands close to B’s baseline, the ball is called in by the linesman but this call is over-ruled by the chair umpire.  In these scenarios, in practice, it is almost automatic that A will challenge the over-ruled call.  That is, A asks for an instant-replay hoping it will show that the ball was indeed in.

This seems logical.  It looked in to the linesman and that is good information that it was actually in.  For example, compare this scenario to the one in which the ball was called out by the linesman and that call was not over-ruled.  In that alternative scenario, one party sees the the ball out and no party is claiming to see the ball in.  In the scenario with the over-rule, there are two opposing views.  This would seem to make it more likely that the ball was indeed in.

But this is a mistake.  The chair umpire knows when he makes the over-rule that the linesman saw it in.  He factors that information in when deciding whether to over-rule.  His willingness to over-rule shows that his information is especially strong:  strong enough to over-ride an opposing view.  And this is further reinforced by the challenge system because the umpire looks very bad if he over-rules and a challenge shows he is wrong.

I am willing to bet that the data would show challenges of over-ruled calls are far less likely to be successful than the average challenge.

A separate observation.  The challenge system is only in place on the show courts.  Most matches are played on courts that are not equipped for it.  I would bet that we could see statistically how the challenge system distorts calls by the linesmen and over-rules by the chair umpire by comparing calls on and off the show courts.