Double Standard for Serena Williams

A top-ranked tennis player in a moment of rage cursed out a judge and shocked the world, headlining every sports and news program from ESPN to MSNBC. Meanwhile, another champion tennis player hurled expletives at a judge and the media barely yawned. While the tennis world still reels from Serena Williams's f-bomb-laced tirade against a line judge on September 12, the "classy" Roger Federer pulled a similar tantrum two days later and didn't get half as much coverage.

 

In US Open finals on September 14, Federer lost in five sets to the previously unheralded Juan Martín del Potro. In a tense third set, after a challenge by del Potro, Federer became infuriated with the line judge. After the judge told Federer to settle down, he said, "Don't tell me to be quiet, OK? I don't give a [expletive] what [del Potro] said, OK?" The 6-foot-6 power-serving Argentinean frustrated Federer throughout, and the favored player lost his famous cool. But after the match, there were no press conference apologies from Federer. And there were no calls for him to be suspended, fined or sanctioned. This despite the fact that his profanity was directed toward del Potro, a serious breach in tennis etiquette.

 

Williams without question lost control as well. After being called for a critical foot fault in her semifinal match against Kim Clijsters, she said to the line judge, "If I could, I would take this [expletive] ball and shove it down your [expletive] throat." The foot fault was a terrible call, and it cost Williams the match. After her rant, she was given a point penalty, and the match was effectively over as Clijsters looked on in a state of bewilderment. It's worth mentioning that the call by the line judge was the equivalent of calling a technical foul in Game 7 of the NBA finals with the score tied in the closing seconds.

 

The behavior of Federer and Williams in these matches are examples of bad sportsmanship at its worst. But the double standard is enough to make you want to swallow your tennis ball. When Williams lost it on the court, she later apologized and admitted idolizing tennis's infamous enfant terrible John McEnroe. McEnroe, now an announcer on CBS, responded, "I guess she idolized me for the wrong reasons, apparently. I feel like I'm on the hot seat now.... I can't defend the indefensible." His co-anchor, Mary Carillo, was even harsher, saying, Williams "could have won the Oscar" for her calm performance at the press conference after the match.

 

On September 13 on ESPN2, Carillo called for Williams's suspension, saying, "If you care about the integrity of your sport, you throw somebody out of the game for a while." Later, she called Williams's $10,500 fine a "joke" and an "embarrassment." By contrast, when Federer cursed, CBS broadcaster Dick Enberg drew a distinction that it was not "venomous."

 

The question is not whether Williams was right or Federer was wrong. They were both wrong. The question is whether hypocrisy is acceptable. The double standard is obvious if we perform the gender flip test: if Williams were a man, would her behavior have been met with similar outrage?

 

To ask the question is to answer it: from McEnroe to Jimmy Connors, male players who blow their tops are part of tennis lore. McEnroe has repeatedly made calls for current pros to not be "robots" and have the "passion" he displayed. But in the country-club white-skirt-and-ponytail world of women's tennis, different behavior is expected. Williams, to put it mildly, doesn't wear white. She is the person who introduced the "cat suit" to the tennis court. Her physical dominance is heretical to demure expectations that still permeate the sport.

 

When you couple gender expectations with racial ones, the inconsistency is no longer just obvious, it's glaring. If Williams were a petite blonde, like 17-year-old American Melanie Oudin, and was called for a match-ending foot-fault-cum-disqualification, the US Open crowd would have turned Arthur Ashe Stadium into Attica. But Williams was booed throughout the match against Clijsters; and when her outburst began, the booing intensified. The next day when she played doubles with her sister Venus, Serena Williams was repeatedly heckled. Her "Americanness" at the US Open was in open question in the way a white player's cultural heritage never would be. Ironically, her most infamous match against Clijsters, as all tennis fans know, was at Indian Wells in 2001 where she was subjected to repeated racial taunts and slurs. She has boycotted Indian Wells ever since and has said she will continue to do so, even though she has been threatened with fines and sanctions.

 

The Williams sisters' ascendance from Compton to queens of the tennis world has been well documented and earned them millions of dollars plus fans around the world. But it has also gained them tons of detractors, from the stands to the blogosphere. This doesn't excuse Serena Williams's conduct, and it's not an attempt to "play the race card"; it's just a fact. When it comes to conquering race and gender in tennis, we are nowhere near match point.

 

E of S Nation: This is an email from an Edge of Sports reader. I am sending it because of the sheer mass of emails I've received making a similar point. I do certainly agree that there is a difference between Serena's outburst and Federer's outburst. But I will say that this doesn't change the fact that the double standards are very real when it comes to outbursts on the tennis court, when seen through a gender or racial lens.

 

I am choosing to run this response because it also makes a valid point about my insistence that the call was terrible as well.

 

Here is the email:

 

I agree with much of what you write, but you are absolutely wrong on this one.  My father was a tennis chair and line umpire as a member of the USLTA and I attended hundreds of matches at the US Open and its predecessor, Forest Hills.

 

Serena’s reaction was WAY over the top and she deserved everything she got, in the way of penalties and castigation.  She should have been fined more severely.  And the match was not taken from her, she was losing, she probably did foot fault—the only person to decide was that line judge who had the angle, and Serena is known to foot-fault with regularity—and it was not a terrible call.  If Serena had not exploded she would have been down an ad point.  (And she could have easily rebounded from being down an ad point and gotten it back to deuce.) She was the one who put herself in that position.  She was the one who threw her racquet down in the first set, was not satisfied, then threw it down again so hard she bent it, when she received her first penalty that was deserved.

 

Was Federer wrong?  Yes, but don’t you dare try to compare their respective outbursts, they were not close.  Federer should have been given a warning and should have apologized, but do not compare their outbursts.

 

Is there abundant racism in this country and this world?  Absolutely.

But don’t blow it out of proportion because of what occurred at the Open.

 


[Dave Zirin is The Nation's sports editor. He is the author A People's History of Sports in the United States (The New Press). His writing has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Sports Illustrated.com and The Progressive. He is the host of Sirius/XM's Edge of Sports Radio.]

8 Reader Comments | Add a comment

Yay, Dave!

I was hoping you'd jump in and set the record straight on this. Thank you! Everything you say about the double-standard is absolutely corrrect.

I think, in addition, that the whole incident has to be seen in the context of the way the Williams sisters are treated like second-class citizens instead of the greatest female tennis players of their generation and perhaps of all time.

When Clisters beat Venus (which I admit I didn't see), the New York Times described the crowd as undeniably in Clisters' court -- where was the famous American "patriotism"? -- and the Times and all the media instantly made Clisters into the darling of the Open, because...wait for it...she's a mom!

Good grief, you'd think she had her baby in a sling on match point -- instead of the entourage of baby-handlers she had in reality. Besides, did anyone ever hear of Sheryl Swoopes -- and how many others?

But back to the double-standard, the essential reality, as you well know, is that African American players have to walk a fine line. I must say, the irony of a "foot fault" being the precipitating event (and a totally unjust call, period) is too perfect.

P.S.

USTA should institute a review/challenge for foot faults? Those super-de-duper computer tracking shots that show the exact landing point of every ball should be able to conclusively determine whether a foot crossed the line.

Sexism in Tennis

Dave,

I agree with you that the media coverage with respect to Williams and Federer's blowups were certainly handled differently. I don't watch enough of tennis to distinguish the difference between what Serena did and what Federer did.
I would say this it took the Americans in the form of McEnroe and Connors to start this whining and griping. Prior to these two great tennis players you had the classy Austrailians such as Laver,Rosewall, and Stolle who didn't act like spoiled brats. They for the most part didn't make gestures to the judges or the crowds for that matter. Unfortunately for me I loved the way Connors and Mcenroe played the game. I just wish they would have dispensed with the theatrics. As a side note to Serena's outburst, I thought newspaper reports stated that she used the word "kill" to the judge. Could you or someone else verify this? Thanks

Equating the 2 events?

Dave,

I realize the events share similarities, but you are essentially calling them equal breaches of etiquette and sportsmanship and rules.

Do you think there is a difference between being 5-10 feet from a lines person, with your racquet extended towards the person, and threatening them with bodily harm.

versus

Being seated in a chair on a changeover, also cursing, and clearly acting unsportsmanlike.

Serena was in an aggressive stance. She harassed the person. She threatened them with harm, whether in the moment, a way to express her anger, a loss of mental control, she did threaten to harm the person.

Federer had no racquet in hand, he was drinking water, he was obviously unsportsmanlike, and I think it warranted a warning certainly.

I agree there is a clear double standard, and most of the points in your column ring true. But I think the 2 examples are not closely paired enough to hold up to scrutiny. Especially on the point of threatening someone. Obviously she wouldn't do anything in front of 20000 people. But that's besides the point.

What the penalty should be for either of them, I have no idea. I am simply expressing my reservations regarding your paired example.

Williams

Dave,

Completely agree (unlike the Semenya stuff). Williams is taking way too much heat for this and something is amiss. Is it because she is black? Or because she is a she? Because of her dominance? Most likely some combination of the above. Federers outburst is a bit different. A better comp would be McEnroe's outbursts way back when. Why no outrage over them?

Regarding the "threats" and the "aggression": Do we really think the line judge thought that Williams would stuff the ball down his f-ing throat? Please. It wasn't a real threat and anyone who's played sports at a highly competitive level knows that these threats are made with shocking regularity to officials and other competitors. This does not condone them but they are not to be taken literally

Fact Check on McEnroe

Sigh . . . look, he have a little leftist-sport angle, fine . . . but, if you'd just be factually complete and intellectually honest, you'd have more credibility with readers outside of The Nation . . . here, the comparison just doesn't work for the reasons stated by others . .

As for people not being outraged about McEnroe, that's a lot of revisionist history.

Although McEnroe now is a funny old man, he was a generally unpopular figure for the majority of his career.

McEnroe was fined literally dozens of times for his outbursts and routinely criticized in the press and booed by fans. His nickname was "Superbrat." After winning the 1981 Wimblebon after screaming at officials, he snubbed the champion dinner, and Chris Lloyd (Everett) publicly apologized for all Americans at his behavior.

At the Australian Open in 1990, McEnroe became the first player in 40 years to be ejected for conduct when he spent 15 minutes screaming at the line officials.

Have the Williams sisters been disrespected because of their race, gender and muscularity? Probably, by some, yes.

But stop omitting inconvenient facts that undermine your Manchean view of the world.
Consider the people that people may really be outraged when an athlete acts chidlishly, threatens a line judge and walks off court.

Serena Williams

Serena should take her punishment like an adult. Her fans should quit whining.

What I would really like is for her to grind her crotch into my face.

Moral equivalence

Ah, moral equivalence ... you can excuse everything. Federer and Williams behaviour was perfectly equal and demands equal treatment? No!

8 Reader Comments | Add a comment

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Dave Zirin is the author of the book: "Welcome to the Terrordome: The Pain, Politics and Promise of Sports" (Haymarket). You can receive his column Edge of Sports, every week by going to dave@edgeofsports.com.


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