Sunday, September 13, 2009
Serena Codes Out Of US Open After Outburst
((HT: NY Post))
Yeah, okay... this wasn't bizarre or anything in the US Open semi-finals...
With Serena Williams ((pictured, thanks Reuters/NYPost)) serving at 5-6, 15-30 in the second set, she faulted on her first serve. On the second serve, a line judge called a foot fault, making it a double-fault — a call rarely, if ever, seen at that stage of any match, let alone the semifinals of a Grand Slam tournament.
That made the score 15-40, putting Kim Clijsters one point from victory.
Instead of stepping to the baseline to serve again, Williams went over and shouted and cursed at the line judge, pointing at her and shaking a ball at her.
“If I could, I would take this ... ball and shove it down your ... throat and kill you,” Williams said.
The ellipses you see are blocking alleged expletives not picked up on courtside microphones...
The line judge went over to the chair umpire, and tournament referee Brian Earley joined in the conversation. Williams then went over and said to the line judge: “I didn’t say I would kill you. Are you serious? Are you serious? I didn’t say that.”
Williams already had been give a code violation warning when she broke her racket after losing the first set. So the chair umpire now awarded a penalty point to Clijsters, ending the match.
“She was called for a foot fault, and a point later, she said something to a line umpire, and it was reported to the chair, and that resulted in a point penalty,” Earley explained. “And it just happened that point penalty was match point. It was a code violation for unsportsmanlike conduct.”
((HT: Eurosport/USTA))
Here's the outburst in question...
Labels:
Serena Williams,
tennis,
US Tennis Open
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