Serena keen to 'move on' from US Open row

The 23-time Grand Slam champion lost the decider in straight sets to Japan's Naomi Osaka after a fiery confrontation with chair umpire Carlos Ramos that she later blamed on sexism.

Published : Sep 24, 2018 10:13 IST , Sydney

Twenty three-time grand slam champion Serena Williams
Twenty three-time grand slam champion Serena Williams
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Twenty three-time grand slam champion Serena Williams

Serena Williams says she is trying to “move on” from the meltdown that overshadowed her US Open final loss but remains perplexed at her coach's admission he illegally signalled to her.

The 23-time Grand Slam champion lost the decider in straight sets to Japan's Naomi Osaka after a fiery confrontation with chair umpire Carlos Ramos that she later blamed on sexism.

READ| Umpire Ramos back in the chair following US Open Serena saga

Williams called Ramos a “thief” and a “liar” in a running row with the Portuguese official that eventually saw her docked a game.

In an interview with Australia's Channel Ten , the American superstar said a male player would not have been treated the same way.

She said women could not get away with “even half of what a guy can do”.

READ |  Male tennis players punished more than women

“Right now we are not, as it's proven, in that same position,” she said in an interview that aired late Sunday.

“But that's neither here nor there. I'm just trying most of all to recover from that and move on.”

Williams said she felt “on the cusp of this amazing moment” before the 6-2, 6-4 loss to Osaka.

A win would have taken her to 24 Grand Slams, equalling Australian Margaret Court's all-time record.

READ| Defiant Australian paper reprints ‘racist’ Serena cartoon

'We don't have signals'

The dispute with Ramos began when Williams was issued a warning for coaching, something her coach sitting in the player's box, Patrick Mouratoglou, admitted to doing.

Williams said she had not seen the Frenchman make a gesture and labelled his subsequent admission “a really confusing moment”.

“I asked him 'what are you talking about you were coaching?',” she said.

“We don't have signals, we've never had signals. He said he made a motion, and I said 'OK so you made a motion and now you're telling people you were coaching me?'.

“That doesn't make sense. Why would you say that?”

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