Lengthy toilet breaks may soon be thing of the past
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[September 16, 2021] By
Sudipto Ganguly
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Inordinately long toilets breaks or medical
timeouts at critical moments could soon be a thing of the past in
men's tennis with the ATP Tour planning to impose stricter rules, a
source at the men's governing body told Reuters.
The practice has long been a bugbear of players, most recently at
the U.S. Open where Stefanos Tsitsipas was accused of gamesmanship
by Andy Murray for taking a lengthy trip to the bathroom at a
critical point in their first-round match.
The Greek world number three, who won the match, denied the charge
and said he had broken no rules as there were no time limits on
bathroom breaks.
"There will be a change to the rules for bathroom breaks and
on-court medical timeouts as well," an ATP source told Reuters.
"I hope that before the next season begins in January, we will have
a stricter rule when it comes to toilet breaks and medical
timeouts."
Murray was furious with Tsitsipas after the Greek's break ran close
to eight minutes, with the Briton saying the disruption had an
impact on the outcome of the match.

In his next match, Tsitsipas left for the locker room
for more than seven minutes after losing the third set, and was jeered
by the Arthur Ashe Stadium crowd on his return.
"I think it's getting to the point where it's definitely becoming a big
issue," the source added. "It's been an issue for a long time but we are
taking quite a serious approach now to try and change it."
Former U.S. Open champion Sloane Stephens, who sits on the WTA players
council, said players who took extended bathroom breaks were guilty of
gamesmanship and called for governing bodies to change rules.
An ATP spokesperson said during the tournament that a review of rules
around toilet breaks, as well as medical time outs, had been an area of
focus and remained a work in progress.
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Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece headed to bathroom on a break after
losing the 3rd set against Carlos Alcaraz of Spain on day five of
the 2021 U.S. Open tennis tournament at USTA Billie King National
Tennis Center. Mandatory Credit: Robert Deutsch-USA TODAY
Sports/File Photo

The WTA said that it was "always open
to conversation and evolving rules if changes are necessary".
Alexander Zverev, who objected to Tsitsipas leaving the court during
their Cincinnati semi-final last month, said the Greek's behaviour
at Flushing Meadows was "unacceptable".
However, Tsitsipas found support from world number one Novak
Djokovic.
"I've got to stand for Stefanos Tsitsipas," Djokovic said at the
U.S. Open. "I don't think he's doing anything wrong. I support him.
"The rule is not clear. Of course you can argue it's all relative,
everyone sees it differently.
"This was a hot topic last couple of weeks. I think he didn't
deserve that much attacks that he was getting in the media from
everyone."
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly; editing by Nick Mulvenney and Peter
Rutherford)
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