The Sunday Telegraph - Sport

Williams suffers meltdown in final

Furious rows with officials overshadow Osaka’s win Serena’s bid for 24th grand slam title ends in tears

- By Simon Briggs TENNIS CORRESPOND­ENT at Flushing Meadows

Serena Williams’s bid for a 24th major title collapsed in a welter of tears, angry accusation and code violations – even featuring a rare game penalty – as

a serious of furious rows with tournament officials overshadow­ed the maiden victory of 20-year-old Naomi Osaka.

For the first time ever at the US Open, the trophy ceremony was drowned out by boos when compere Tom Rinaldi stood up to take charge. Williams then dissolved into tears as she tried to bring some positivity to what was a desperatel­y disappoint­ing way for Osaka to open her grand-slam account.

“I don’t want to be rude, I just want to tell you guys she played well and this is her first grand slam,” said Williams. Then it was Osaka’s turn, and she looked more devastated than delighted. She even wound up apologis-

ing for having beaten the crowd’s favourite in scenes that have surely have little precedent in this or any other sport.

Osaka had just become the first major-winner from Japan, defying a hugely partisan crowd to close out a 6-2, 6-4 victory in just 79 minutes. But it will be the hostile scenes shared by Williams and chair umpire Carlos Ramos that most people will remember from this tempestuou­s final.

It wasn’t just Ramos, either. Williams broke into tears for first time as she confronted tournament referee Brian Earley late in the second set. “You know my character,” she said, her voice cracking with emotion. “This is not right. To lose a game for saying

that, it’s not fair. How many other men do things? There’s a lot of men out here who have said a lot of things. It’s because I am a woman, and that’s not right.”

Williams also rounded on Donna Kelso, the supervisor for the Women’s Tennis Associatio­n, and told her “I’ve worked so hard to be in this position.”

This flashpoint came in response to the game penalty, which was the result of a third code violation during the match. The first had been handed out for coaching, after Ramos spotted Patrick Mouratoglo­u making hand signals from the Williams player’s box.

When the original violation was announced, Williams immediatel­y charged up to Ramos to insist that she

never takes coaching, and never cheats. The argument seemed to end there. But then, when she smashed a racket on being broken back for 3-3 in the second set, Ramos went by the book and gave her a point penalty.

Now Williams lost her temper – something that has happened twice before at the US Open. During the 2011 final, she accused chair umpire Eva Asderaki of being “a hater” and “ugly inside”.

And even before that, in 2009, her semi-final against Kim Clijsters ended in another point penalty after she told a lineswoman “If I could, I would take this ----ing ball and shove it down your

From Page 1 f---ing throat.” Last night, the major argument began with a reference to those earlier incidents. “Unbelievab­le, every time I play here, I have problems,” said Williams. “I did not get coaching, I don’t cheat. You need to make an announceme­nt. I have a daughter and I stand for what’s right for her. You owe me an apology.

“For you to attack my character is something that is wrong,” Williams continued. “You will never ever, ever be in another final. You are a liar.”

Then, when she called Ramos a “thief” for taking away a point from her, he gave her a code violation for verbal abuse, resulting in the game penalty that carried Osaka to 5-3 in the

second set. The players didn’t realise what had happened at first, so rare is this extreme sanction. Williams went to receive and Osaka to serve, and Ramos had to call them back to the chair to explain that Williams was actually going to have to serve again. This was the moment when Earley was called to the court for a lengthy argument.

Eventually Williams did restart the match, and did so with aplomb to hold serve. But she was still weeping at the changeover before Osaka stepped up, shrugging off all the controvers­y, and produced her own near-flawless service game. The way she handled the pressure and the turmoil of the whole occasion was quite spectacula­r, as was her tennis throughout. As for Ramos,

he was not handed the usual souvenir trophy for invigilati­ng a major final.

Later, Mouratoglo­u confirmed that he had been coaching Williams in an interview with broadcaste­r Pam Shriver, but insisted that everyone does it. He also suggested that the whole schemozzle could threaten Williams’s career going forward.

Earlier, Jamie Murray had successful­ly defended his US Open mixed-doubles title yesterday in partnershi­p with Bethanie Mattek-Sands. It was his fourth grand-slam title in mixed doubles, with his third different partner. bles title yesterday in partnershi­p with Bethanie Mattek-Sands. It was his fourth grand-slam title in mixed doubles, with his third different partner.

 ??  ?? Clash: Serena Williams argues with officials
Clash: Serena Williams argues with officials
 ??  ?? Flashpoint: Serena Williams complains to the umpire during her defeat by Naomi Osaka in yesterday’s US Open final
Flashpoint: Serena Williams complains to the umpire during her defeat by Naomi Osaka in yesterday’s US Open final

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