live Infotainment Factory: Medvedev escapes default for berating umpire

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Friday, 12 July 2024

Medvedev escapes default for berating umpire


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Carlos Alcaraz is only a couple of months past his 21th birthday, and yet this whole grand slam success thing is already a bit been-there, done-that for him.

Moving a step closer to a second consecutive Wimbledon trophy and fourth major championship overall, Alcaraz overcame a shaky start Friday to beat Daniil Medvedev 6-7 (1), 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 in the semi-finals at Centre Court.

Watch Wimbledon 2024 live and exclusively free on Nine and 9Now. Plus centre court in 4K UHD on Stan Sport, the home of grand slam tennis.

“I feel like I’m not new anymore. I feel like I know how I’m going to feel before the final. I’ve been in this position before,” Alcaraz said. “I will try to do the things that I did well last year and try to be better.”

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Like last year, his opponent in Sunday's title match will be Novak Djokovic, who advanced with a 6-4, 7-6 (2), 6-4 victory against No. 25 seed Lorenzo Musetti. Djokovic won 15 of 16 points when he went to the net in the first set and finished 43 for 56 in that category.

It'll be the first time the same two men meet in consecutive Wimbledon finals since Djokovic beat Roger Federer in 2014 and 2015.

“He’s as complete a player as they come,” Djokovic said about Alcaraz, who won the 2023 final in five sets. “It's going to take the best of my abilities on the court overall to beat him.”

Djokovic, who hadn't reached a final at any tournament all season and needed surgery in June for a torn meniscus in his right knee, will be vying for his eighth championship at the All England Club. That would tie Federer’s mark for the most by a man — and put him one behind Martina Navratilova’s record of nine — while making the 37-year-old from Serbia the first player in tennis history with a career total of 25 Grand Slam titles.

“I know what I have to do,” Alcaraz said. “I’m sure he knows what he has to do to beat me.”

Carlos Alcaraz

The No. 2-seeded Djokovic eventually worked his way into his 10th final at Wimbledon and 37th at a major.

“I don't want to stop here," Djokovic said. "Hopefully I'll get my hands on that trophy.”

After a so-so opening set against Medvedev, Alcaraz transformed back into the energetic, attacking, crowd-pleasing force who already was the first teenager to be No. 1 in the ATP rankings and is the youngest man to have won a major trophy on three surfaces: grass, clay and hard courts.

Now the Spaniard is one victory away from joining Boris Becker and Bjorn Borg as the only men in the Open era, which began in 1968, with multiple championships at the All England Club before turning 22.

Alcaraz also triumphed at the U.S. Open in 2022 and the French Open last month and is 3-0 in major finals.

“We’re going to see a lot of him in the future, no doubt,” Djokovic said. “He’s going to win many more Grand Slams.”

On a cloudy afternoon, the No. 3-seeded Alcaraz went through some ups and downs against No. 5 Medvedev.

Carlos Alcaraz

“ I started really, really nervous,” Alcaraz said. “He was dominating the match."

Indeed, Medvedev grabbed an early 5-2 lead, but then got into trouble with his play and his temper.

Alcaraz broke to get within 5-4 with a drop shot that chair umpire Eva Asderaki ruled — correctly, according to TV replays — bounced twice before Medvedev got his racket on the ball.

He voiced his displeasure, and Asderaki, after climbing down from her seat to huddle with tournament referee Denise Parnell during the ensuing changeover, issued a warning to Medvedev for unsportsmanlike conduct.

Such was his frustration that he was handed the warning after he appeared to say "f--- you" three times.

“I said something in Russian. Not unpleasant, but not over the line,” Medvedev said at his news conference.

Former British tennis player Tim Henman said Medvedev was lucky to not be sanctioned further.

"If you use a swear word you're going to get a code violation and a warning and a fine, but if you verbally abuse the umpire, that's when there's a question mark. It could be a default," the former world No 4 told the BBC.

"Just from where we're sitting to see the umpire get down off the umpire's chair, to see the umpire and the supervisor to go on the court, that doesn't happen unless something has gone on."

Leading tennis journalist Carole Bouhcard said in social media that the "match should have stopped there."

However, he regrouped quickly and was just about perfect in that set’s tiebreaker.

Then it was Alcaraz’s turn to get headed in the right direction, which didn’t take long. He got the last break he would need for a 4-3 edge in the fourth when Medvedev sailed a backhand long, then sat in his sideline chair, locked eyes with his two coaches and started muttering and gesticulating.

“I was playing well,” Medvedev said, “and just it was not enough.”

Nearly every time Alcaraz emitted one of his “Uh-eh!” two-syllable grunts while unleashing a booming forehand, spectators audibly gasped, regardless of whether the point continued. Often enough, it didn’t: Alcaraz had 24 forehand winners, 20 more than Medvedev.

In addition to the Wimbledon men’s final, Sunday’s sports schedule features the final of the men’s soccer European Championship in Germany, where Spain will meet England.

When Alcaraz alluded to that in his on-court interview by saying, “It’s going to be a really good day for the Spanish people, as well,” he drew boos from the locals — perhaps his biggest misstep all day.

Alcaraz smiled and added: “I didn’t say Spain is going to win. I just said that it’s going to be a really fun, fun day.”

Carlos Alcaraz is only a couple of months past his 21th birthday, and yet this whole grand slam success thing is already a bit been-there, done-that for him.

Moving a step closer to a second consecutive Wimbledon trophy and fourth major championship overall, Alcaraz overcame a shaky start Friday to beat Daniil Medvedev 6-7 (1), 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 in the semi-finals at Centre Court.

Watch Wimbledon 2024 live and exclusively free on Nine and 9Now. Plus centre court in 4K UHD on Stan Sport, the home of grand slam tennis.

“I feel like I’m not new anymore. I feel like I know how I’m going to feel before the final. I’ve been in this position before,” Alcaraz said. “I will try to do the things that I did well last year and try to be better.”

READ MORE: League great tears apart popular Immortal choices

READ MORE: Olympic coach withdraws as misconduct claims emerge

READ MORE: Flag bearers named as superstar Paralympians get nod

Like last year, his opponent in Sunday's title match will be Novak Djokovic, who advanced with a 6-4, 7-6 (2), 6-4 victory against No. 25 seed Lorenzo Musetti. Djokovic won 15 of 16 points when he went to the net in the first set and finished 43 for 56 in that category.

It'll be the first time the same two men meet in consecutive Wimbledon finals since Djokovic beat Roger Federer in 2014 and 2015.

“He’s as complete a player as they come,” Djokovic said about Alcaraz, who won the 2023 final in five sets. “It's going to take the best of my abilities on the court overall to beat him.”

Djokovic, who hadn't reached a final at any tournament all season and needed surgery in June for a torn meniscus in his right knee, will be vying for his eighth championship at the All England Club. That would tie Federer’s mark for the most by a man — and put him one behind Martina Navratilova’s record of nine — while making the 37-year-old from Serbia the first player in tennis history with a career total of 25 Grand Slam titles.

“I know what I have to do,” Alcaraz said. “I’m sure he knows what he has to do to beat me.”

Carlos Alcaraz

The No. 2-seeded Djokovic eventually worked his way into his 10th final at Wimbledon and 37th at a major.

“I don't want to stop here," Djokovic said. "Hopefully I'll get my hands on that trophy.”

After a so-so opening set against Medvedev, Alcaraz transformed back into the energetic, attacking, crowd-pleasing force who already was the first teenager to be No. 1 in the ATP rankings and is the youngest man to have won a major trophy on three surfaces: grass, clay and hard courts.

Now the Spaniard is one victory away from joining Boris Becker and Bjorn Borg as the only men in the Open era, which began in 1968, with multiple championships at the All England Club before turning 22.

Alcaraz also triumphed at the U.S. Open in 2022 and the French Open last month and is 3-0 in major finals.

“We’re going to see a lot of him in the future, no doubt,” Djokovic said. “He’s going to win many more Grand Slams.”

On a cloudy afternoon, the No. 3-seeded Alcaraz went through some ups and downs against No. 5 Medvedev.

Carlos Alcaraz

“ I started really, really nervous,” Alcaraz said. “He was dominating the match."

Indeed, Medvedev grabbed an early 5-2 lead, but then got into trouble with his play and his temper.

Alcaraz broke to get within 5-4 with a drop shot that chair umpire Eva Asderaki ruled — correctly, according to TV replays — bounced twice before Medvedev got his racket on the ball.

He voiced his displeasure, and Asderaki, after climbing down from her seat to huddle with tournament referee Denise Parnell during the ensuing changeover, issued a warning to Medvedev for unsportsmanlike conduct.

Such was his frustration that he was handed the warning after he appeared to say "f--- you" three times.

“I said something in Russian. Not unpleasant, but not over the line,” Medvedev said at his news conference.

Former British tennis player Tim Henman said Medvedev was lucky to not be sanctioned further.

"If you use a swear word you're going to get a code violation and a warning and a fine, but if you verbally abuse the umpire, that's when there's a question mark. It could be a default," the former world No 4 told the BBC.

"Just from where we're sitting to see the umpire get down off the umpire's chair, to see the umpire and the supervisor to go on the court, that doesn't happen unless something has gone on."

Leading tennis journalist Carole Bouhcard said in social media that the "match should have stopped there."

However, he regrouped quickly and was just about perfect in that set’s tiebreaker.

Then it was Alcaraz’s turn to get headed in the right direction, which didn’t take long. He got the last break he would need for a 4-3 edge in the fourth when Medvedev sailed a backhand long, then sat in his sideline chair, locked eyes with his two coaches and started muttering and gesticulating.

“I was playing well,” Medvedev said, “and just it was not enough.”

Nearly every time Alcaraz emitted one of his “Uh-eh!” two-syllable grunts while unleashing a booming forehand, spectators audibly gasped, regardless of whether the point continued. Often enough, it didn’t: Alcaraz had 24 forehand winners, 20 more than Medvedev.

In addition to the Wimbledon men’s final, Sunday’s sports schedule features the final of the men’s soccer European Championship in Germany, where Spain will meet England.

When Alcaraz alluded to that in his on-court interview by saying, “It’s going to be a really good day for the Spanish people, as well,” he drew boos from the locals — perhaps his biggest misstep all day.

Alcaraz smiled and added: “I didn’t say Spain is going to win. I just said that it’s going to be a really fun, fun day.”

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