NEW YORK: "All hell broke loose" is how bad boy of tennis John McEnroe described drama queen Serena Williams as she went kicking and screaming out of the US Open on Saturday.
Williams has made a cameo appearance in the medical drama ER and lists acting as a hobby but she does not need to rely on a script to produce her own drama.
On Day 13 of the hardcourt major, wide-eyed fans at Flushing Meadows witnessed the latest episode to unfold around the 11-time Grand Slam champion.
Facing Kim Clijsters in a hotly anticipated semifinal showdown at the Open, an angry outburst from Williams resulted in one of the most bizarre endings to a match on a Grand Slam stage.
With the Belgian on the brink of victory, defending champion Williams was called for a foot fault on a second serve to go match point down.
Astounded by the verdict, Williams immediately saw red and threateningly marched up to the official. She waved her racquet ominously and thrust the ball into the lineswoman's face as she launched into a tirade.
"I swear to God I'm ... going to take this ... ball and shove it down your ... throat, you hear that? I swear to God," Williams told the line judge.
The lineswoman reported her to umpire Louise Engzell for verbal abuse. Having already received a warning earlier in the match for smashing a racquet, Williams was handed an automatic point penalty for "unsportsmanlike conduct", giving Clijsters the match, 6-4, 7-5, and a final date with Danish ninth seed Caroline Wozniacki.
Not since McEnroe was defaulted from a fourth-round match against Mikael Pernfors at the 1990 Australian Open - when he swore at the umpire, supervisor and referee - has a singles player suffered such an ignominious exit from such a high-profile match.
But Williams remained unrepentant for her tirade even though the lineswoman told the chair umpire that she felt threatened.
"She says she felt threatened? She said this to you?" she asked the reporter who fielded the question. "I've never been in a fight my whole life, so I don't know why she should have felt threatened."
However, Saturday's incident was just the latest to surround the fiery American.
"I'm drama, and I don't want to be drama," Williams said in May at the French Open where she labeled Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez "a cheat" following a controversial point in their third-round match.
Questions:
1. Where was the US open held?
2. What was Williams’ first warning for during her match?
3. Who did Williams label a “cheat”?
Answers:
1. Flushing Meadows.
2. Smashing her racquet.
3. Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez.
(英語點津 Helen 編輯)
About the broadcaster:
Chantal Anderson is a multimedia journalist at the China Daily Web site. Originally from Seattle, Washington she has found her way around the world doing photo essays in Greece, Mexico and Thailand. She is currently completing a double degree in Journalism and International Studies from the University of Washington.