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Serena Williams, Umpire Abuse, and American Culture

canada-man

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https://www.theepochtimes.com/serena-williams-umpire-abuse-and-american-culture_2658622.html

Commentary

If you follow sports at all, you know that Serena Williams erupted into a rage and verbal nastiness during her U.S. Open tennis finals match on Sept. 8. Williams, arguably the greatest female tennis player of all time, called the match umpire a “thief” among other unflattering characterizations that were heard by millions of spectators around the world.

In doing so, she not only embarrassed herself, shattered the dignity of her own sport, and marred the first Grand Slam victory by Japan’s talented and consummately gracious Naomi Osaka, but she shined a spotlight on a couple of deep-seated problems in American society.

Williams’s strong verbal attack against the umpire was symptomatic of the declining respect for authority, as well as the declining respect for each other that has become endemic in contemporary America. Please understand, I am not blaming Williams for these problems. She isn’t the cause of these problems, but merely a prominent symbol of them.

Frankly, professional tennis tournament officials and governing boards have only themselves to blame for allowing a “gentlemen’s [and ladies’] sport” to degenerate into verbal hooliganism. Indeed, Williams is a much more restrained version of the volcanic John McEnroe whose emotional immaturity and verbal pyrotechnics 30 to 40 years ago paved the way for this latest verbal explosion.

Even in baseball—historically a much less genteel sport than tennis—players who verbally abuse an umpire are ejected from the game.

Ejection is more problematical for tennis, since removal of one player ends the match, but here is how professional tennis could do it: Make a rule that verbal abuse of anyone on the court brings automatic disqualification; give the offending player’s share of the prize money to the paid ticketholders in attendance to compensate them for their contracted tennis match being truncated; stipulate that three such instances result in a permanent ban from professional tennis.

Do this, and the problem would greatly diminish. It’s simple economics: Raise the cost of misbehavior to the point where such behavior becomes nearly unthinkable.

One of the consequences of Williams’s verbal assault on the umpire is the message it sends to children: If you disagree with an official strongly enough, then it is permissible to berate and yell at the official. The token fine levied against Williams a day or two after the tournament will in no way erase the vivid mental images of her conduct. You can bet on younger athletes mimicking that behavior by bad-mouthing officials in their respective sports.

Verbally abusing officials isn’t harmless. In addition to whatever stress it imposes on the target, it discourages people from helping out communities and schools by serving as sports officials. Indeed, there already are many communities in the United States that are having a hard time finding anyone willing to officiate sports, or to work as volunteer coaches for children.

Many Americans now shy away from officiating because angry parents are so quick to verbally abuse and harass any official who makes a call against little Johnny’s team. Others decline to volunteer as coaches because some self-righteous parents who believe that their child is entitled to start or play an important position routinely bash coaches who don’t assess the team’s needs in the same way.

In short, the American proclivity to engage in verbal abuse already has hurt our children, by causing many adults with some talent for sports to shy away from youth sports involvements because it has become so unpleasant.

The problem isn’t confined to sports. Think of all the verbal abuse that has been heaped upon police since the “cops are pigs” countercultural meme gained traction in the turbulent 1960s. It persists today (see Colin Kaepernick, about whom I will write next). The impact? According to a recent report in The Christian Science Monitor, small towns in America are having great difficulty in finding anyone willing to go into police work.

I know none of us loves the cop who “picks” on us when we are speeding, but do we really want to create a social atmosphere in which nobody is willing to perform this vital, difficult, and under-appreciated work because their fellow citizens routinely denounce and condemn police officers?

We Americans have become entirely too quick to become verbally abusive of others. Sadly, today’s toxic political polarization aggravates that tendency, although it seems to me that politics didn’t make us mean, but instead, our reduced respect for authority and the verbal meanness that accompanies that disrespect has infected political discourse. (Examples abound, with the one freshest in my mind being the goons who staged the ugly interruptions of the confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh in the hallowed chambers of the U.S. Senate.)

Now that I’ve mentioned the political realm, I think partisans on both sides of the political divide know of good people who have rebuffed attempts to get them to run for public office because they don’t want to endure having their families subjected to the harsh and increasingly vicious verbal abuses to which political candidates are often subjected.

Sadly, I have no hope that verbal attacks against political officeholders and officeseekers will lessen any time soon. But can we please make an effort to muzzle ourselves and refrain from verbally trashing sports officials and coaches, and from demonizing the police? We need good people in those positions, but every time we abuse people in those positions, we drive good people away from where their talents could bless our society.

That’s why Williams’s outburst was so harmful. We have to stop behaving like this, for the sake of both our children and our communities.

Dr. Mark Hendrickson is an adjunct professor of economics at Grove City College. He is the author of several books including “The Big Picture: The Science, Politics, and Economics of Climate Change” (CFACT.org, 2018).

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
 

LT56

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When I re-watch the video of Serena’s meltdown the thing I notice is that the crowd is very pro-Serena and they cheer her on as she argues with the umpire.


It’s not surprising that a US crowd is going to support Serena but I don’t think they were doing her any favours by egging her on to yell at the umpire. In fact, the crowd seemed to just validate her sense of being wronged and contributed to her getting even more worked up and upset than she already was...the more the crowd cheered her, the more Serena escalated.

I’m not suggesting it’s the crowd’s fault that Serena lost her cool...just an observation.
 

derrick76

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When I re-watch the video of Serena’s meltdown the thing I notice is that the crowd is very pro-Serena and they cheer her on as she argues with the umpire.


It’s not surprising that a US crowd is going to support Serena but I don’t think they were doing her any favours by egging her on to yell at the umpire. In fact, the crowd seemed to just validate her sense of being wronged and contributed to her getting even more worked up and upset than she already was...the more the crowd cheered her, the more Serena escalated.

I’m not suggesting it’s the crowd’s fault that Serena lost her cool...just an observation.
The wrong time for them to become pro-Serena.
 

Aardvark154

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So everything had already gone to Hell back 38 years ago when John McEnroe was yelling and screaming at Umpires?
 

blueray

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I like Serena as an athlete, bit I was really embarrassed for her, she showed no class. Everyone wants to jump on board and say how gracious she was during the trophy presentation....nope, she was the cause of the whole bad situation. She should be ashamed of herself.
 

LT56

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I like Serena as an athlete, bit I was really embarrassed for her, she showed no class. Everyone wants to jump on board and say how gracious she was during the trophy presentation....nope, she was the cause of the whole bad situation. She should be ashamed of herself.
Agreed...She should be the one apologizing.
 

Bud Plug

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I think the article understates what Williams did, because it fails to note that she threatened the umpire with "you'll never work one of my matches again". Considering how often she reaches the latter stages of tournaments, that's a threat to the livelihood of the umpire. Despicable.
 

derrick76

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I think the article understates what Williams did, because it fails to note that she threatened the umpire with "you'll never work one of my matches again". Considering how often she reaches the latter stages of tournaments, that's a threat to the livelihood of the umpire. Despicable.
Just need you to answer a question to see where your mind is at. Do you think Trump is despicable?

BTW, you may want to have a read.

https://news.sky.com/story/serena-w...player-umpire-carlos-ramos-has-upset-11494215

All you can dig a little deeper and watch a lot more tennis and you will find that the sport is filled with angry players who lash out for one reason or another.

Maybe then the bad-Serena-fetish will end.
 

derrick76

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The bottom line is Serena was going to lose to Osaka no matter what she did. She couldn't handle being dominated and lashed out at the umpire. Osaka's win was not an upset, it was a demolition.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRux-38F4FU
You should note Serena was leading 3-1 in the 2nd set, and things started to unravel when it was 3-2 (still in her favour) and she was given a point penalty there after to be down 0-15 in the 6th game.

A little context helps.
 

Bud Plug

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Just need you to answer a question to see where your mind is at. Do you think Trump is despicable?

BTW, you may want to have a read.

https://news.sky.com/story/serena-w...player-umpire-carlos-ramos-has-upset-11494215

All you can dig a little deeper and watch a lot more tennis and you will find that the sport is filled with angry players who lash out for one reason or another.

Maybe then the bad-Serena-fetish will end.
Does Trump play tennis? I don't think so. LOL!

I read your linked article. It really destroys Serena's argument that the umpire was picking on her because she is a woman. It also shows that a number of players misbehave at times. That's what the rules are for. And yes, Nadal's threat that Ramos would never work another match of his was also despicable. It's interesting that in no case was it concluded that Ramos had misapplied a rule. It's also interesting that he continues to be assigned to important matches.

Serena's outburst got more media play because: a) it happened in a final, and b) it selfishly undermined the break though win of her opponent. However, she chose the timing, so the consequences of that timing are on her. Also, it's worth noting that her coach admitted he was cheating (coaching), just as Ramos had charged.

I'm sure the Serena story will die soon enough, sooner still if should would make the apology that she should to her opponent, the fans, and the umpire.
 

shack

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A little context helps.
The context is that they were back on serve after Osaka broke back. Basically tied in the 2nd set and serena down a set.
 

Insidious Von

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You should note Serena was leading 3-1 in the 2nd set, and things started to unravel when it was 3-2 (still in her favour) and she was given a point penalty there after to be down 0-15 in the 6th game.

A little context helps.
Your little context is wrong, I saw the match. Serena got broken in the 3rd game and lost her mind. She broke back after her tirade but promptly got broken again, she went ballistic again and got docked a game leaving Osaka to serve for the match. It wasn't an upset, it was a demolition.
 
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