Behaviour was wilder in my day, says Wimbledon referee - 3 minutes read
Behaviour was wilder in my day, says Wimbledon referee
LONDON: Wimbledon referee Andrew Jarrett insisted Friday that on-court behaviour was much worse in his playing days despite record fines being handed out at this year’s tournament.
In the first week at the All England Club, a total of US$106,000 was levied in fines, the bulk of which was incurred by Australia’s Bernard Tomic (US$58,000) for tanking his opening round match against Jo-Wilfried Tsonga.
Serena Williams was handed a US$10,000 fine for damaging a practice court with her racquet while Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus was hit with the same amount for “unsportsmanlike behaviour”.
Italian wild man Fabio Fognini was fined US$3,000 for saying he wanted to see “a bomb dropped” on the tournament.
However, Jarrett, 61, a former tour player in the 1970s and 1980s – the era of John McEnroe, Jimmy Connors and Ilie Nastase – believes standards of behaviour have improved.
“I would humbly claim that my generation was the worst behaved. We were shocking back in the late 70s and early 80s,” said Jarrett, who is stepping down as Wimbledon referee after 14 years in the job.
“I think the code of conduct has been beneficial to the development of the sport and achieved a level of professionalism.
“Otherwise, tennis could have gone in a different direction.”
Jarrett will be succeeded in 2020 by Gerry Armstrong, who was a chair umpire for over 40 years.
Armstrong officiated in eight Wimbledon singles and once defaulted McEnroe at the Australian Open.
Jarrett admitted there were many testing times on his Wimbledon watch, but he will leave on good terms with all players even if they may have objected to decisions he had to make.
“I once played a very fierce Davis Cup tie in Spain and a guy I hardly knew went for me at the net and the ball hit me right in the chest,” he recalled.
“In the heat of battle, I called him a rude name with the only Spanish word I knew. There was a bit of to-do.
“But a few years later we had a beer together and laughed about the whole thing.
“You know that things flare up but as you get older, you realise you are bigger than that.”
Source: Freemalaysiatoday.com
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Keywords:
The Championships, Wimbledon • Referee • London • The Championships, Wimbledon • Referee • Andrew Jarrett • All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club • Australia • Bernard Tomic • Tennis scoring system • Jo-Wilfried Tsonga • Serena Williams • Tennis court • Racket (sports equipment) • Aryna Sabalenka • Belarus • Italy • Fabio Fognini • Cincinnati Masters • Andrew Jarrett • Association of Tennis Professionals • John McEnroe • Jimmy Connors • Ilie Năstase • My Generation • The Championships, Wimbledon • Sport • Tennis • Gerry Armstrong (footballer) • Referee • The Championships, Wimbledon • Types of tennis match • John McEnroe • Australian Open • The Championships, Wimbledon • Davis Cup • Spain • Spanish Empire •
LONDON: Wimbledon referee Andrew Jarrett insisted Friday that on-court behaviour was much worse in his playing days despite record fines being handed out at this year’s tournament.
In the first week at the All England Club, a total of US$106,000 was levied in fines, the bulk of which was incurred by Australia’s Bernard Tomic (US$58,000) for tanking his opening round match against Jo-Wilfried Tsonga.
Serena Williams was handed a US$10,000 fine for damaging a practice court with her racquet while Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus was hit with the same amount for “unsportsmanlike behaviour”.
Italian wild man Fabio Fognini was fined US$3,000 for saying he wanted to see “a bomb dropped” on the tournament.
However, Jarrett, 61, a former tour player in the 1970s and 1980s – the era of John McEnroe, Jimmy Connors and Ilie Nastase – believes standards of behaviour have improved.
“I would humbly claim that my generation was the worst behaved. We were shocking back in the late 70s and early 80s,” said Jarrett, who is stepping down as Wimbledon referee after 14 years in the job.
“I think the code of conduct has been beneficial to the development of the sport and achieved a level of professionalism.
“Otherwise, tennis could have gone in a different direction.”
Jarrett will be succeeded in 2020 by Gerry Armstrong, who was a chair umpire for over 40 years.
Armstrong officiated in eight Wimbledon singles and once defaulted McEnroe at the Australian Open.
Jarrett admitted there were many testing times on his Wimbledon watch, but he will leave on good terms with all players even if they may have objected to decisions he had to make.
“I once played a very fierce Davis Cup tie in Spain and a guy I hardly knew went for me at the net and the ball hit me right in the chest,” he recalled.
“In the heat of battle, I called him a rude name with the only Spanish word I knew. There was a bit of to-do.
“But a few years later we had a beer together and laughed about the whole thing.
“You know that things flare up but as you get older, you realise you are bigger than that.”
Source: Freemalaysiatoday.com
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
The Championships, Wimbledon • Referee • London • The Championships, Wimbledon • Referee • Andrew Jarrett • All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club • Australia • Bernard Tomic • Tennis scoring system • Jo-Wilfried Tsonga • Serena Williams • Tennis court • Racket (sports equipment) • Aryna Sabalenka • Belarus • Italy • Fabio Fognini • Cincinnati Masters • Andrew Jarrett • Association of Tennis Professionals • John McEnroe • Jimmy Connors • Ilie Năstase • My Generation • The Championships, Wimbledon • Sport • Tennis • Gerry Armstrong (footballer) • Referee • The Championships, Wimbledon • Types of tennis match • John McEnroe • Australian Open • The Championships, Wimbledon • Davis Cup • Spain • Spanish Empire •