Scottish Daily Mail

‘If I get injured, I’ll sue you and you WILL pay!’

Simon’s incredible rant at umpire

- NICK HARRIS at Wimbledon

French seed Gilles Simon crashed out of the men’s singles after threatenin­g to sue umpire John Blom for not stopping play during drizzle and then blasted the tournament for allowing action to continue in what he said were dangerous conditions.

The world no 20 was beaten 6-3, 7-6, 3-6, 6-4 by a resurgent Grigor Dimitrov, who upset Andy Murray two years ago to reach the semi-finals, but who has experience­d some dire form since.

Although Simon credited the Bulgarian for his win, he didn’t hold back in venting his spleen over the weather. During the match he said to Blom: ‘I don’t want to play when it’s raining on grass. That’s it. If I play and get injured, I will sue you and you will pay.’

Afterwards he said: ‘I feel one day I’m going to get injured on slippery grass. I’m going to sue everyone in the stadium.

‘I’m just going to tell you what the supervisor told me, and I let you decide how you feel when someone is telling you this straight into your face.

‘he told me, “It’s raining but the water is not going to the ground. Like it’s really light rain and it’s there and it stays in the air and it’s flying away. So the grass is not wet.” So in the match you can see I’m p **** d, yes, I’m p **** d because I want to destroy him. That’s how it is.

‘They always force you to play. You can’t say anything.’

he said he hopes to raise the issue with the ATP Player council — which includes Murray — where Simon will also share his dislike of equal prize money for men and women.

‘You have a large majority that is against equal prize money and you have a few players that are in favour of it. And Andy is just one of these players,’ he added.

Dimitrov arrived at the tournament having lost his first match at six consecutiv­e tournament­s.

Two years ago he was the rising star who downed the home hero and defending champion Murray, but has fallen to no 37 in the world from a high of no 8.

‘With each match you get more confident,’ he said. ‘You start to feel the grass, your movement, your shots. everything becomes very natural. You get in a good rhythm. So that gives you that calmness when you come out on the court.’

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