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		<title>Tennis Deserves Fault for Serena&#8217;s Flawed Justice</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Nov 2009 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>iwellbc</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tennis.fanhouse.com/2009/11/30/tennis-deserves-fault-for-serenas-flawed-justice/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Filed under: <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/category/u-s-open/" rel="tag">U.S. Open</a></p><img hspace="4" vspace="4" border="1" alt="" src="http://www.blogcdn.com/tennis.fanhouse.com/media/2009/11/serena2-425-113009.jpg" /><br />This is when a suspension is not a suspension, a major fine is not a major fine.<br /><br />It took months to figure this out, how to word it perfectly, but on Monday, the International <span class="injectedLink">Tennis</span> Federation did it.<br /><br />It gave <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/players/wta/serena-williams/168339" class="injectedLink">Serena Williams</a> a punishment that wasn't a punishment.<br /><br />The $175,000 fine and three-year suspended ban from the U.S. Open and probationary period for her f-bomb laced, threatening tirade at a tiny U.S. Open line judge do sound like big words, don't they?<br /><br />They aren't. Break it down, and Williams will end up paying just $82,500. She recently referred to $50,000 as the furniture budget in her home remodeling.<br /><br />If she doesn't have another major outburst, the fine is cut to that number, and the suspension thrown out. She will not miss a tournament. Her debt will be paid.<br /><br />Look, the fine means nothing to Williams. She won't feel it. But the ITF can say that it's a record size.<br /><br />OK, Serena? Is this OK with you?<br /><br />I can only imagine ITF officials pleading with her to please, please let them appear to be an actual governing body.<br /><br />You remember what happened. The line judge called footfault on Williams, who then waved her racquet in the judge's face and threatened to take the ``(f-ing) ball'' and shove it down her "(f-ing) throat.''<br /><br />That led to a point penalty on match point. So the match was over.<br /><br />Let's be honest: Race is an issue. It always is with tennis and the Williams sisters. Some people will think Williams was given a record fine because she's black. Others will think she was given a pass because she's black.<br /><br />Some people think she was the bully, some think she was victim of a bad call.<br /><br />The ITF doesn't really care what's right. That was never an issue. The only issue was this: How do you give a penalty that looks big but isn't?<br /><br />The point isn't that she was punished too much or too little, but rather that it was a non-justice based on non-truths, when true leadership was crying out because people's real feelings were involved about the game, Williams, race, and sportsmanship.<br /><br />The feelings are so real that some people insist the video evidence proves she never footfaulted. Others demand the video evidence proved she did.<br /><br />Here's the truth: There is no camera shot, video or still, that can determine anything.<br /><br />There are lots of truths missing here, a mess that has made tennis look uglier than ever. Williams' smokescreen reasons for her tantrum, her ``punishment,'' the ITF's naked self-interest, John McEnroe's irresponsibility.<br /><br />The ITF let this thing drag on so long that hard feelings only grew. It became a social debate lining up mostly along racial lines.<br /><br />So the ITF points out that this is the biggest fine ever at a major. Jeff Tarango got about half as much for storming off at <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/" class="injectedLink">Wimbledon</a> and calling a chair ump corrupt. His wife later slapped the judge, too.<br /><br />Of course, the ITF doesn't mention that Tarango was also banned from two majors. McEnroe was once suspended for two months.<br /><br /><img hspace="4" vspace="4" border="1" align="right" src="http://www.blogcdn.com/tennis.fanhouse.com/media/2009/11/mcenroe-150-11302009.jpg" alt="Serena Williams, John McEnroe" />But McEnroe had been a brat for years, and that could have been a career-achievement punishment. Serena has not behaved bad nearly as often, though she did threaten a player who cheated her at this year's French Open. In fact, one tennis official told the New York Times, "We're not talking about a John McEnroe type character here." <br /><br />Here was the telling quote, a bit of truth, from ITF president Francesco Ricci Bitti a few weeks ago:<br /><br />"I don't think (an Australian Open ban) would make much sense, because it would penalize the people handing out the punishment. For the grand slam committee to exclude her from a grand slam doesn't seem likely.<br /><br />"A significant financial penalty makes more sense. But it has to be significant enough for the fans.''<br /><br />They didn't want to kick her out of a major tournament because that would hurt the tournament. How is that's a concern to a governing body?<br /><br />And they wanted a fine big enough to look like justice, not to serve it.<br /><br />Let's go back over what really happened, over the truth.<br /><br />Williams was in the semifinals of the U.S. Open playing <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/players/wta/kim-clijsters/168424" class="injectedLink">Kim Clijsters</a> in a tight match. Williams had been spouting off all year about how she was the real No. 1, not No. 1 ranked <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/players/wta/dinara-safina/171553" class="injectedLink">Dinara Safina</a>. That had racial overtones. So did the sudden popularity of teenager <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/players/wta/melanie-oudin/404946" class="injectedLink">Melanie Oudin</a>, a white girl from the South, at the Open. How much of her appeal was that she was the great white hope?<br /><br />So that was the setting. And Clijsters, just back from a 2 1/2-year break, was beating Williams. Williams was two points from losing when she was called for footfault on her second serve.<br /><br />Did she footfault? Yes. Absolutely.<br /><br />I was sitting just behind the line judge, several rows back. Other media members were sitting there too. She clearly stepped way out onto the thick baseline.<br /><br />But that's not really the point. With several chances, Williams could not bring herself to play the final point. Why?<br /><br />Because to her, that was less embarrassing than losing to a woman just back from maternity leave.<br />Williams quit this match, not planning to get thrown out, but knowing at some level that she would.<br /><br />Meanwhile, McEnroe, still the face of the game in many ways, was on TV ripping the line judge, saying he didn't see a footfault and that a judge doesn't make calls like that such in a crucial situation. Juan Martin del Potro, by the way, was called for a footfault in a crucial third-set tiebreaker last week during the ATP Finals.<br /><br />But whatever, McEnroe, famous for being a jerk to officials, was irresponsibly and unwittingly fueling a racial debate even though there was this truth:<br /><br />From where he was sitting, he could not have seen whether Williams had actually foot-faulted.<br /><br />The next day, Williams issued a statement calling it an "unfair line call.'' The day after that, with endorsers presumably upset, she issued a real apology.<br /><br />She went on to win the tour championship, reclaim the No. 1 ranking, appear nude on the cover of ESPN the Magazine, pitch her new book, appear on Leno and every other show.<br /><br />Did she get away with this? Obviously.<br /><br />But was justice served? Well, that was never a consideration.<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic">Email me at gregcouch09@aol.com</span><p style="padding:5px;background:#ddd;border:1px solid #ccc;clear:both"><a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/2009/11/30/tennis-deserves-fault-for-serenas-flawed-justice/">Tennis Deserves Fault for Serena's Flawed Justice</a> originally appeared on <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com">Tennis FanHouse</a> on Mon, 30 Nov 2009 14:00:00 EST .  Please see our <a href="http://www.weblogsinc.com/feed-terms/">terms for use of feeds</a>.</p><p style="clear: both;padding: 8px 0 0 0;height: 2px;font-size: 1px;border: 0;margin: 0;padding: 0">&#160;</p><p><a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/2009/11/30/tennis-deserves-fault-for-serenas-flawed-justice/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent link to this entry">Permalink</a>&#160;&#124;&#160;<a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/forward/19258569/" title="Send this entry to a friend via email">Email this</a>&#160;&#124;&#160;<a href="http://www.technorati.com/cosmos/search.html?rank=&#38;fc=1&#38;url=http://tennis.fanhouse.com/2009/11/30/tennis-deserves-fault-for-serenas-flawed-justice/" title="Linking Blogs">Linking&#160;Blogs</a>&#160;&#124;&#160;<a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/2009/11/30/tennis-deserves-fault-for-serenas-flawed-justice/#comments" title="View reader comments on this entry">Comments</a></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Filed under: <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/category/u-s-open/" rel="tag">U.S. Open</a></p>
<p><img hspace="4" vspace="4" border="1" alt="" src="http://www.blogcdn.com/tennis.fanhouse.com/media/2009/11/serena2-425-113009.jpg" /><br />This is when a suspension is not a suspension, a major fine is not a major fine.</p>
<p>It took months to figure this out, how to word it perfectly, but on Monday, the International <span class="injectedLink">Tennis</span> Federation did it.</p>
<p>It gave <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/players/wta/serena-williams/168339" class="injectedLink">Serena Williams</a> a punishment that wasn&#8217;t a punishment.</p>
<p>The $175,000 fine and three-year suspended ban from the U.S. Open and probationary period for her f-bomb laced, threatening tirade at a tiny U.S. Open line judge do sound like big words, don&#8217;t they?</p>
<p>They aren&#8217;t. Break it down, and Williams will end up paying just $82,500. She recently referred to $50,000 as the furniture budget in her home remodeling.</p>
<p>If she doesn&#8217;t have another major outburst, the fine is cut to that number, and the suspension thrown out. She will not miss a tournament. Her debt will be paid.</p>
<p>Look, the fine means nothing to Williams. She won&#8217;t feel it. But the ITF can say that it&#8217;s a record size.</p>
<p>OK, Serena? Is this OK with you?</p>
<p>I can only imagine ITF officials pleading with her to please, please let them appear to be an actual governing body.</p>
<p>You remember what happened. The line judge called footfault on Williams, who then waved her racquet in the judge&#8217;s face and threatened to take the &#8220;(f-ing) ball&#8221; and shove it down her &#8220;(f-ing) throat.&#8221;</p>
<p>That led to a point penalty on match point. So the match was over.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s be honest: Race is an issue. It always is with tennis and the Williams sisters. Some people will think Williams was given a record fine because she&#8217;s black. Others will think she was given a pass because she&#8217;s black.</p>
<p>Some people think she was the bully, some think she was victim of a bad call.</p>
<p>The ITF doesn&#8217;t really care what&#8217;s right. That was never an issue. The only issue was this: How do you give a penalty that looks big but isn&#8217;t?</p>
<p>The point isn&#8217;t that she was punished too much or too little, but rather that it was a non-justice based on non-truths, when true leadership was crying out because people&#8217;s real feelings were involved about the game, Williams, race, and sportsmanship.</p>
<p>The feelings are so real that some people insist the video evidence proves she never footfaulted. Others demand the video evidence proved she did.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s the truth: There is no camera shot, video or still, that can determine anything.</p>
<p>There are lots of truths missing here, a mess that has made tennis look uglier than ever. Williams&#8217; smokescreen reasons for her tantrum, her &#8220;punishment,&#8221; the ITF&#8217;s naked self-interest, John McEnroe&#8217;s irresponsibility.</p>
<p>The ITF let this thing drag on so long that hard feelings only grew. It became a social debate lining up mostly along racial lines.</p>
<p>So the ITF points out that this is the biggest fine ever at a major. Jeff Tarango got about half as much for storming off at <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/" class="injectedLink">Wimbledon</a> and calling a chair ump corrupt. His wife later slapped the judge, too.</p>
<p>Of course, the ITF doesn&#8217;t mention that Tarango was also banned from two majors. McEnroe was once suspended for two months.</p>
<p><img hspace="4" vspace="4" border="1" align="right" src="http://www.blogcdn.com/tennis.fanhouse.com/media/2009/11/mcenroe-150-11302009.jpg" id="vimage_2" alt="Serena Williams, John McEnroe" />But McEnroe had been a brat for years, and that could have been a career-achievement punishment. Serena has not behaved bad nearly as often, though she did threaten a player who cheated her at this year&#8217;s French Open. In fact, one tennis official told the New York Times, &#8220;We&#8217;re not talking about a John McEnroe type character here.&#8221; </p>
<p>Here was the telling quote, a bit of truth, from ITF president Francesco Ricci Bitti a few weeks ago:</p>
<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think (an Australian Open ban) would make much sense, because it would penalize the people handing out the punishment. For the grand slam committee to exclude her from a grand slam doesn&#8217;t seem likely.</p>
<p>&#8220;A significant financial penalty makes more sense. But it has to be significant enough for the fans.&#8221;</p>
<p>They didn&#8217;t want to kick her out of a major tournament because that would hurt the tournament. How is that&#8217;s a concern to a governing body?</p>
<p>And they wanted a fine big enough to look like justice, not to serve it.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s go back over what really happened, over the truth.</p>
<p>Williams was in the semifinals of the U.S. Open playing <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/players/wta/kim-clijsters/168424" class="injectedLink">Kim Clijsters</a> in a tight match. Williams had been spouting off all year about how she was the real No. 1, not No. 1 ranked <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/players/wta/dinara-safina/171553" class="injectedLink">Dinara Safina</a>. That had racial overtones. So did the sudden popularity of teenager <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/players/wta/melanie-oudin/404946" class="injectedLink">Melanie Oudin</a>, a white girl from the South, at the Open. How much of her appeal was that she was the great white hope?</p>
<p>So that was the setting. And Clijsters, just back from a 2 1/2-year break, was beating Williams. Williams was two points from losing when she was called for footfault on her second serve.</p>
<p>Did she footfault? Yes. Absolutely.</p>
<p>I was sitting just behind the line judge, several rows back. Other media members were sitting there too. She clearly stepped way out onto the thick baseline.</p>
<p>But that&#8217;s not really the point. With several chances, Williams could not bring herself to play the final point. Why?</p>
<p>Because to her, that was less embarrassing than losing to a woman just back from maternity leave.<br />Williams quit this match, not planning to get thrown out, but knowing at some level that she would.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, McEnroe, still the face of the game in many ways, was on TV ripping the line judge, saying he didn&#8217;t see a footfault and that a judge doesn&#8217;t make calls like that such in a crucial situation. Juan Martin del Potro, by the way, was called for a footfault in a crucial third-set tiebreaker last week during the ATP Finals.</p>
<p>But whatever, McEnroe, famous for being a jerk to officials, was irresponsibly and unwittingly fueling a racial debate even though there was this truth:</p>
<p>From where he was sitting, he could not have seen whether Williams had actually foot-faulted.</p>
<p>The next day, Williams issued a statement calling it an &#8220;unfair line call.&#8221; The day after that, with endorsers presumably upset, she issued a real apology.</p>
<p>She went on to win the tour championship, reclaim the No. 1 ranking, appear nude on the cover of ESPN the Magazine, pitch her new book, appear on Leno and every other show.</p>
<p>Did she get away with this? Obviously.</p>
<p>But was justice served? Well, that was never a consideration.<br /><br style="font-style: italic;" /><span style="font-style: italic;">Email me at gregcouch09@aol.com</span>
<p style="padding:5px;background:#ddd;border:1px solid #ccc;clear:both;"><a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com/2009/11/30/tennis-deserves-fault-for-serenas-flawed-justice/">Tennis Deserves Fault for Serena&#8217;s Flawed Justice</a> originally appeared on <a href="http://tennis.fanhouse.com">Tennis FanHouse</a> on Mon, 30 Nov 2009 14:00:00 EST .  Please see our <a href="http://www.weblogsinc.com/feed-terms/">terms for use of feeds</a>.</p>
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