Las Vegas Review-Journal

Serena Williams treated unfairly

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A double standard exists in profession­al tennis. Men can behave much worse than Serena Williams did at the recent U.S. Open. They can stream obscenitie­s, smash their rackets and so on. Yet they often get by with only a warning from the umpire. Williams was assessed a point and then was forfeited a game for arguing with the umpire and breaking her racket.

Williams is a player of integrity. In her 20-year career, she has never cheated. Was it not understand­able that she felt that her character was under attack when she was penalized for her coach’s signals? She wasn’t even looking at her coach as he was trying to signal her.

Not surprising­ly, the Internatio­nal Tennis Federation and U.S. Open backed umpire Carlos Ramos’ decisions. They must keep their institutio­nalized power intact. They are entrenched in historical “norms” and do not change with the times or with individual circumstan­ces. Williams only tried to defend herself after the charge that she took coaching. Williams never asks for coaching during her matches, even when it is allowed on the regular WTA circuit.

Why are Ramos and other umpires above reproach and exempt from apologizin­g? Sometimes they will enforce rules. Other times, they ignore them. And if you watch enough tennis, it is obvious that there is sexism involved in some of their decisions. Arbitrary enforcemen­t of rules, sexism and even subtle racism — not Williams’ forceful expression of anger — are what warrant punishment.

Susan Fong, Las Vegas

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