Fognini may face fine for Wimbledon ‘bomb’ outburst

The Italian 12th seed made the outburst during his straight-sets third round defeat to world number 94 US' Tennys Sandgren on Saturday.

Published : Jul 08, 2019 17:27 IST , London

Fabio Fognini apologised after his outburst during his straight-sets third round defeat to world number 94 US' Tennys Sandgren on Saturday.
Fabio Fognini apologised after his outburst during his straight-sets third round defeat to world number 94 US' Tennys Sandgren on Saturday.
lightbox-info

Fabio Fognini apologised after his outburst during his straight-sets third round defeat to world number 94 US' Tennys Sandgren on Saturday.

Fabio Fognini may face a fine for saying “a bomb should explode” on Wimbledon, All England Club chief executive Richard Lewis said on Monday.

The Italian 12th seed made the outburst during his straight-sets third round defeat to world number 94 US' Tennys Sandgren on Saturday.

“It’s fair to play here? Damned English, really. Damned, really. Wish a bomb would explode on this club. A bomb should explode here,” he fumed in Italian.

He apologised afterwards, which Lewis said would be taken into account.

“It was one of these heat of the moment comments. It was a very unfortunate comment and Fabio was good enough to apologise straight away,” the Wimbledon supremo said.

“It wouldn’t surprise me in the end if there was a small fine but I think we will certainly keep it in context, and readily accept the apology.”

READ: Nadal 'playing without any weaknesses' at Wimbledon

During the first week of the championships, Australia’s Bernard Tomic was stripped of his entire 45,000 pounds ($56,600) prize money on for tanking in his first round match, which was over in just 58 minutes.

“Generally the behaviour has been outstanding,” said Lewis.

“There’s been one or two high-profile incidents. But if you look back over the years, there’s always something going on.

“It’s one of the beauties of tennis, that it’s a head-to-head contest and emotions and passions run high and sometimes they slightly overspill in a way that there has to be some sanctions.”

ALSO READ: Federer eases into Wimbledon second week

Meanwhile, Australian hothead Nick Kyrgios will not face action after he admitted deliberately blasting the ball at Rafael Nadal’s body during his defeat to the Spanish third seed.

“It’s very common in doubles where players aim at the opponent. It’s part and parcel of being a professional tennis player,” said Lewis.

“That and underarm serving are very much within the rules of the sport.” Kyrgios hit two underarm serves during the match on Centre Court and also had a lengthy rant at the umpire.

“Some of the conversational discussion Nick had with the umpire is maybe worthy of scrutiny,” Lewis added.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment