McEnroe: US Open final drama will not affect Serena

John McEnroe does not believe Serena Williams' row with the umpire at the US Open final will hamper her at January's Australian Open.

Published : Dec 07, 2018 09:31 IST

John McEnroe
John McEnroe
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John McEnroe

Serena Williams  can brush aside the controversy surrounding her  US Open  final loss and has no need to apologise for her row with the umpire, according to  John McEnroe.

Williams has not featured on the  WTA  Tour since being beaten by Naomi Osaka at the US Open but will return to the court at The  Mubadala World Tennis Championship  in Abu Dhabi later this month before participating in the  Australian Open  in January.

The 23-time Grand Slam champion's loss to Osaka was overshadowed by her confrontation with umpire Carlos Ramos, who she called a "liar" and a "thief" after she was penalised with a game penalty following code violations for on-court coaching, racket abuse and verbal abuse.

RELATED| Serena keen to 'move on' from US Open row

McEnroe insists the furore that followed will not be a distraction when Williams goes in search of a record-equalling 24th Grand Slam in Melbourne.

"I don't think so," said McEnroe, who was speaking ahead of the Champions Tennis at the Royal Albert Hall.

"I mean, there's other things that have happened. This isn't the first thing that's ever happened with her.

"She's been there. I doubt that that's her major concern right now. I think people actually will be behind her just because she's still playing.

"The event's better if she's in it, let's state the obvious, and she's trying to tie Margaret Court if she wins that [Australian Open] so that automatically makes it more interesting."

 

Williams had claimed she was treated unfairly as a woman. McEnroe, who was known for the occasional on-court outburst, believes Williams has no need to apologise to Ramos and thinks the whole situation has been overblown.

"She used a lot of cards but if 'thief' is the worst word you used, I've got some bad news for you," he added.

"There's a lot of other players, including myself, and in a lot of other sports that have done far worse. Not that it's the best thing to be called a thief but, I mean, come on."

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Responding to a journalist's point that Williams claimed men have done worse than what she did, McEnroe replied: "I'm surprised she didn't invoke my name there! [I] wasn't disappointed, just surprised.

"She's absolutely correct about that, right? That's not a sexist comment, is it? I think that's just a statement of fact."

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