Just days after it happened, the U.S. Open final between Serena Williams and Naomi Osaka has already solidified its place as one of the most notable controversies in sports.
Williams was fined $17,000 – and lost the match – after chair umpire Carlos Ramos issued her three code violations in Saturday’s match. First, Ramos issueds Williams a warning, citing her for receiving coaching via hand signals. Williams, upset by the call, demanded an apology and later smashed her racket on the court, resulting in another violation that lost her a point. Williams responded by calling Ramos a “thief,” and the umpire docked her a game for verbal abuse.
Osaka went on to win the second set and thus the match. But the story didn’t end there.
The match ignited a great debate: Was Williams right, or was the umpire? Some applauded Williams’ post-game statement that the umpire’s actions were sexist; others dismissed the sexism claims, or agreed with Williams’ sentiment but not her approach. According to The Times of London, other umpires are reportedly discussing boycotting Serena Williams’ future matches.
To twin sisters Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson and Monique Lamoureux-Morando – Know Your Value contributors and U.S. Women’s Hockey Olympic gold medalists – the incident is indicative of larger gender disparities in sports.
“You can argue that [Williams] should or should not have better kept her composure, but that isn’t the real issue at hand – it’s whether a man would have received the same treatment,” Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson told Know Your Value. “There’s a perception that women need to behave. Yet in, say, baseball, you see guys quite literally screaming in an umpire’s face – it takes a lot for them to get ejected. If you saw that from any woman athlete in any sport it would be considered unacceptable.”
In support of Williams
Billie Jean King, the famed former No. 1 tennis pro who won the “Battle of the Sexes” against Bobby Riggs in 1973, tweeted similar sentiments the night of the match and penned an Op-Ed in the Washington Post the following day.
(2/2) When a woman is emotional, she’s “hysterical” and she’s penalized for it. When a man does the same, he’s “outspoken” & and there are no repercussions. Thank you, @serenawilliams, for calling out this double standard. More voices are needed to do the same.
— Billie Jean King (@BillieJeanKing) September 9, 2018
On social media, users circulated videos of men tennis pros and other athletes erupting in anger at referees yet receiving little or no punishment. For example: ESPN host Jay Williams posted a video of Roger Federer berating an umpire during the 2009 U.S. Open men’s final. “Do you have any rules in there?” Federer said. “Don’t tell me to be quiet, OK? When I want to talk, I’ll talk, all right?” Federer was fined $1,500.
To all the people that keep saying the McEnroe video was a different era… there are a plethora of examples. Here is @rogerfederer in the heat of an argument. Is what @serenawilliams said worse? pic.twitter.com/D0si0mZ9Ef
— Jay Williams (@RealJayWilliams) September 9, 2018
Former tennis pro James Blake tweeted that he had gone unpunished for saying “worse” things to an official.
“You also want to give credit where credit is due,” said Lamoureux-Davidson. “During her post-match interview, Serena said many times that Naomi did a great job, and she really did. Yet the conversation hasn’t been about Naomi’s win at all, which is unfortunate.”









