American tennis professional Serena Williams condemned the head of the Russian Tennis Federation for how he recently described her and her older sister, calling his remarks “extremely sexist” and “racist.”
WATCH: Serena Williams hits back at ‘sexist’ comments
During a late night Russian TV talk show, tennis President Shamil Tarpischev depicted Serena and Venus Williams as “brothers.” The younger sister, who is currently ranked No. 1 in women’s singles tennis, publicly responded to Tarpischev on Sunday.
“I thought his comments were very insensitive. I thought they were extremely sexist, as well as racist at the same time. I thought they were in a way bullying,” Williams, 33, said from Singapore, ahead of the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) Finals on Monday. She won the U.S. Open title last month.
The WTA promptly banned Tarpischev for a year and fined him $25,000. In his initial apology, Tarpischev said that he “didn’t think this incident deserves so much fuss.” But he later issued another mea culpa.
“While my intention was to make a small joke, I realize now that what I said was inappropriate in any context,” he wrote in an open letter. “I understand now that my remarks were wrong and could be construed as discriminatory.”









