Death knell sounded for Grand Slam line judges at Australian Open
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[February 10, 2021]
By Sudipto Ganguly
(Reuters) - The Australian Open looks
to have seen the last of the crouching officials scrutinising the
lines of the tennis court after they were replaced by technology for
this year's tournament -- a move that has been largely welcomed by
players.
This year's Grand Slam at Melbourne Park is the first major to
replace line judges with electronic line calling, a change brought
about through necessity as part of a COVID-19 health measure to
reduce the number of people required on-site.
It may have deprived tennis fans of courtside drama, but the players
are not complaining.
"It saves me the trouble of attempting to challenge or thinking
about did they call it correctly or not," said U.S. Open champion
Naomi Osaka.
"If they do want to continue this way, I actually have no complaints
about it because I think that there's a lot of arguments that aren't
going to happen because of this technology."
Line calls are being delivered real time through remote tracking
cameras, meaning there have been no angry outbursts from players
over close calls -- a plus for American Jennifer Brady, who "would
rather not argue with people".
Serena Williams has had her fair share of run-ins with line judges
over her glittering career, infamously threatening to shove a ball
down the throat of one who called a foot fault in a U.S. Open
semi-final.
The 23-times Grand Slam champion said her previous experience of the
system in Cincinnati left her unimpressed.
"But I like it now because ... it takes away a lot of the human
error, which clearly I definitely don't need. I should be the
biggest fan of that," she said, adding that as a "futurist, like
Iron Man," she is a fan of technology.
ON THE MONEY
Tournament director Craig Tiley was certain that, while the line
judge would survive at lower levels, the days when future elite
umpires honed their skills by calling the lines at Grand Slams were
numbered.
"I was actually talking to a friend yesterday who's a line judge,
and he asked me, 'Do you think my career is over?' And I said, 'As a
line judge, yes, at the professional levels'," Tiley told Reuters.
"That's going to no longer be a pathway ... because the electronic
line calling is here to stay."
While world number one Novak Djokovic recognised line judges have
been part of the game for so long, he was all for the introduction
of technology.
[to top of second column] |
Craig Tiley, CEO of
Tennis Australia (R) before a press conference. Play on Thursday was
cancelled after a hotel quarantine worker in Melbourne returned a
positive result for the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) Up to 600
players and support staff connected to the Australian Open will have
to isolate until they have been tested. REUTERS/Loren Elliott
"I understand that there is a tradition and history and the way we
kind of got used to the line umpires being there," said Djokovic,
who was defaulted at last year's U.S. Open for accidentally striking
an official in the throat with a ball.
"But when you draw a line, I actually am in favour of technology. I
don't see a reason why we need the line umpires."
The French Open remains the only Grand Slam that does not use the
ball-tracking system that allows players to challenge calls, instead
leaving the umpires to make final decisions based on marks left by
the ball on the red clay.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the majority of courts at last year's
U.S. Open, apart from the main show courts, dispensed with line
judges as a health precaution.
Venus Williams thought line judges rarely got it wrong.
"I think the lines-people are also pretty accurate, too," she said.
"They're usually right on the money, so ... It could be interesting
to see where this goes."
Briton Francesca Jones was not sure the technology was infallible,
while Frenchman Gilles Simon said he felt the lack of challenges
made the game "monotonous".
"They really need to check that system," Jones said after a
questionable call during her match against Shelby Rogers. "I much
prefer human error than systematic error.
"Look, it's a new system and I understand why it's being used but I
think that definitely needs to be revised."
On Wednesday, American Frances Tiafoe exploded on the Rod Laver
Arena court with a string of expletives during his defeat to Novak
Djokovic, joining the chorus of players who have found the
technology glitchy.
"I hate it, I cannot stand it," Tiafoe later said. "I'll get used to
it if they carry on with it but I'm not a fan."
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly, additional reporting by Nick
Mulvenney, Leela de Kretser in Melbourne and Simon Jennings in
Bengaluru; editing by Peter Rutherford)
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