The Freeman

Serena’s coach favors in-match coaching

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Serena Williams' coach says in-match coaching should be allowed in tennis to help the sport's popularity.

Patrick Mouratoglo­u, who admitted he used banned hand signals to try to help Williams during her loss in the US Open final, wrote Thursday (Friday, PHL time) in a posting on Twitter that making coaching part of the spectacle would let “viewers enjoy it as a show” and “ensure that it remains pivotal in the sport.”

Mouratoglo­u also pointed to what he called a “hypocrisy” — players currently are getting coached at tournament­s that ban coaching.

And he pointed out that all sorts of individual sports — boxing, golf, cycling — permit athletes to consult someone during competitio­n.

“I have never understood why tennis is just about the only sport in which coaching during matches is not allowed,” Mouratoglo­u wrote.

Quite a bit of debate about the topic of on-court coaching was sparked when chair umpire Carlos Ramos gave Williams a code violation after Mouratoglo­u gestured in her direction early in the second set of Naomi Osaka's 6-2, 6-4 victory over the American for the title at Flushing Meadows last month.

A few games later, Williams received another warning, this time for smashing her racket, and that second violation automatica­lly cost her a point. Eventually, Williams called Ramos “a thief,” drawing a third violation, this one for “verbal abuse,” which cost her a game. Williams was fined a total of $17,000 the next day, including $4,000 for coaching, which is not allowed in Grand Slam matches.

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