Sun.Star Pampanga

US Open umpire who spoke to Kyrgios gets 2-tournament ban

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The chair umpire who climbed out of his seat to talk with Nick Kyrgios during a U.S. Open match was suspended for two tournament­s by the ATP.

Mohamed Lahyani will not officiate at his next two scheduled events — the China Open in Beijing, which starts on Oct. 1, and the Shanghai Masters the following week, the men’s tour said in a statement Tuesday.

The ATP says Layhani’s actions during Kyrgios’ second-round victory over Pierre-Hugues Herbert at Flushing Meadows on Aug. 30 were “deemed to have compromise­d the impartiali­ty that is required of an official.”

According to the statement, he is one of seven fulltime ATP chair umpires. As a full-time employee, he is subject to tour discipline, even though what he did came at the U.S. Open, which is under the jurisdicti­on of the U.S. Tennis Associatio­n.

Kyrgios, a 23-year-old Australian, did not appear to be putting forth much effort while dropping the first set and falling behind 3-0 in the second against Herbert. During a changeover, Lahyani left his chair — a rare sight in Grand Slam tennis — to speak to Kyrgios, leaning with hands on knees while saying, “I want to help you.”

The 30th-seeded Kyrgios wound up beating Herbert 4-6, 7-6 (6), 6-3, 6-0, then lost to Roger Federer in his next match.

Herbert said at the time he thought Lahyani should be sanctioned in some way.

“This was not his job,” Herbert said. “I don’t think he’s a coach, he’s an umpire, and he should stay on his chair for that.”

Kyrgios, meanwhile, laughed at the idea that he had received coaching or a pep talk from Lahyani.

The next day, USTA spokesman Chris Widmaier said Lahyani had gone “beyond our protocol,” but would be allowed to continue to work matches during the U.S. Open because of his “exemplary track record as an internatio­nal tennis official.”

Lahyani then was assigned to umpire doubles matches during that tournament.

“Mohamed is a world-class and highly respected official. However, his actions during the match crossed a line that compromise­d his own impartiali­ty as a chair umpire,” Gayle Bradshaw, ATP executive vice president of rules and competitio­n, said in Tuesday’s statement. “Although well-intended, his actions were regrettabl­e and cannot go without disciplina­ry action on our own Tour. We know that he will learn from this experience and we look forward to welcoming him back in October.”

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