No call on a double-bounce helps
Iga Swiatek at the Australian Open against Emma Navarro
Send a link to a friend
[January 22, 2025]
By HOWARD FENDRICH
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Not that Iga Swiatek needs the help
during her dominant run through the Australian Open so far, but she
did get the benefit of a no-call when she failed to reach a ball hit
by her opponent Emma Navarro before it bounced twice Wednesday,
renewing the debate over the use of video reviews in tennis.
The No. 2-seeded Swiatek's 6-1, 6-2 victory was not much in doubt —
she's ceded a total of just 14 games through five matches heading
into Thursday night's semifinals against Madison Keys — although the
score was still 2-all against Navarro when the point drawing a lot
of attention happened.
“I don’t feel like it was a huge momentum swing. Obviously the score
says otherwise,” Navarro said.
“I was definitely able to reset. I was kind of a little bit
frustrated on the changeover," the eighth-seeded American added.
"Maybe it bled into one point, and then I told myself: ‘It’s time to
move on, it’s in the past, can’t linger on it.’”
It was a 13-stroke point, and the 10th was a drop shot by Navarro
that landed close to the net. Swiatek raced forward, nearly doing
the splits and dragging her right knee as she got to the ball. Her
response got over the net, and she eventually put away a backhand
after Navarro replied. That gave Swiatek a 3-2 lead; the match went
on another 25 minutes, and Navarro didn't take another game.
A replay shown afterward showed Swiatek did not get to the ball
before the double bounce. A chair umpire can be asked to review
something like that, although only if the player stops during the
point — which Navarro didn't do in the heat of the moment, instead
trying to prolong the exchange.
When she saw a replay on the video board at Rod Laver Arena during
the ensuing changeover, Navarro asked official Eva Asderaki-Moore,
“Did you see that?”
[to top of second column] |
Iga Swiatek, left, of Poland, is congratulated by Emma Navarro of
the U.S. following their quarterfinal match at the Australian Open
tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Wednesday, Jan. 22,
2025. (AP Photo/Asanka Brendon Ratnayake)
“I asked her after the point if I could see a
replay," Navarro said, "and she said I played it, so I couldn’t see
it.”
Navarro thinks that rule should be changed so final rulings can be
made with the benefit of video review.
The athletes, she said, “should be allowed to see after the point,
even if you play. It happened so fast. You hit the shot, and she
hits it back, and you’re just, like, ‘Oh, I guess I’m playing.’ In
the back of your head, you’re, like, ‘OK, maybe I can still win the
point even though it wasn’t called.’ It’s going to be a downer if I
stop the point and it turns out it wasn’t a double bounce. It’s
tough.”
Navarro said she wasn't sure whether Swiatek realized the ball
bounced twice.
Swiatek, a 23-year-old from Poland, was asked about it at her news
conference — and said she didn't know.
“I didn’t see the replay after this point, because after the point,
I didn’t look up for the screens because I wanted to stay focused
and didn’t want this point to stay in my head for longer period of
time,” said Swiatek, a five-time Grand Slam champion who will face
another American, No. 19 Keys, for a berth in Saturday's final
against No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka or No. 11 Paula Badosa.
“I wasn’t sure if it was a double bounce or I hit it with my frame,”
Swiatek said. “It was hard to say because I was full sprinting.”
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
|