The Scotsman

Cartoon of Williams ‘spitting dummy’ at US Open not racist, says watchdog

● Caricature about row with umpire used ‘exaggerati­on’ but was in ‘public interest’

- By ELLIE CULLEN 0 Serena Williams at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party on Sunday.

A cartoon of Serena Williams published in the aftermath of her US Open final defeat by Naomi Osaka was not racist, a watchdog has found.

Williams was involved in a furious row with umpire Carlos Ramos in the US Open final last September – calling him a thief for taking a point away from her. The 23-time grand slam champion lost her cool after being given a warning for coaching from the stands early in the second set against Osaka.

She was penalised a point for a second offence, smashing her racket, and then a game after she verb ally abused umpire Ramos, calling him a liar and a thief. That put Williams 5-3 down in the second set and she went on to lose 6-2 6-4. In the aftermath, A us- tralia’s Herald Sun newspaper published a car to on of Williams, with some believing the tennis star was depicted in an “ape-like pose”.

The Australian Press Council said: “Concern was expressed that the cartoon depicted Ms Williams with large lips, a broad flat nose, a wild afro - styled ponytail hair style different to that worn by Ms Williams during the match and positioned in an ape-like pose.”

In an adjudicati­on released yesterday, the watchdog said it acknowledg­ed that some readers found the cartoon offensive, but said there was “a sufficient public interest” in commenting on sportsmans­hip during a “significan­t dispute” between a high-profile tennis player and an umpire at the US Open final.

It added :“The council considers that the cartoon uses exaggerati­on and absurdity to make its point but accepts the publisher’s claim that it does not depict Ms Williams as an ape, rather showing her as ‘spitting the dummy’, a nonracist caricature familiar to most Australian readers.”

At the time, cartoonist Mark Knight defended the drawing and insisted he was s imply illustrati­ng Ms Williams’ behaviour on the day, telling the paper: “The cartoon was just about Serena on the day having a tantrum.”

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