Zverev freaks out and attacks the referee!


The ATP has expelled German Alexander Zverev (3rd in the world in singles) from the Acapulco tennis tournament for repeatedly hitting the referee’s chair with his racket after a doubles defeat on Tuesday, an extremely rare decision.

• Read also: ‘It’s not who I am,’ claims Zverev after domestic abuse allegations

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“Due to his unsportsmanlike behavior at the end of his doubles match on Tuesday evening, Alexander Zverev was expelled from the Acapulco tournament,” the governing body of the men’s professional circuit announced on its Twitter account.

The 24-year-old was due to play his second-round singles match against compatriot Peter Gojowczyk on Wednesday, after winning his first-round match against American Jenson Brooksby at 4:54 a.m. Monday night, the most late in the history of professional tennis.

On Tuesday night, Zverev came off his feet after losing a super tiebreaker doubles match with Brazilian Marcelo Melo against Britain’s Lloyd Glasspool and Finland’s Harri Heliövaara 6-2, 4-6, 10-6.

In the video footage, Zverev is seen hitting referee Alessandro Germani’s chair three times, sitting down and then getting up to insult him and giving a final racquet kick just under the official’s foot, as he got down from his chair.

Beyond his exclusion from the Acapulco tournament, the German, Olympic champion in Tokyo in singles and winner of the last Masters, could be sanctioned more heavily according to the ATP disciplinary code.

McEnroe or Djokovic before him

“If the First Vice-President, Rules and Competitions, determines that this was an infraction particularly detrimental to the proper conduct of the tournament or detrimental to the integrity of the sport, he may consider additional sanctions (fines or suspensions)”, specifies the ATP in this disciplinary code.

Player suspensions for bad behavior are very rare in professional tennis.

A few big names have suffered this fate during a match, however: American John McEnroe was disqualified at the 1990 Australian Open for insulting the referee and Australian Nick Kyrgios in Rome in 2019 for throwing a chair at the short.

Serbian Novak Djokovic was ejected from the court at the 2020 United States Open for unintentionally hitting a ball in the direction of a linesman. Canadian Denis Shapovalov had experienced a similar misadventure when his ball hurt the eye of French chair umpire Arnaud Gabas in 2017 in the Davis Cup. As for Argentinian David Nalbandian, he was deprived of the end of the Queen’s final in 2012, for involuntarily injuring a linesman.

Zverev is also the subject of an investigation opened by the ATP into allegations of domestic violence made against him by his ex-girlfriend.

In June 2020, he was also criticized for partying in a bar full of people, when he promised to isolate himself for 14 days after participating in the Adria Tour, an exhibition tournament with an audience and without distancing. organized by Novak Djokovic during which several players including the world No.1 had been contaminated with Covid-19.

This edition of the Acapulco tournament was the scene of another unusual incident on Tuesday night: John Millman had to give up after being shot in the eye.

The Australian preferred to smile by posting a photo on his Instagram account where we see him with a plaster on the eye touched involuntarily and accompanied by the mention: “You must always watch the ball”.

He then apologized in a “story” posted on his Instagram account.



Reference-www.tvanouvelles.ca

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