November 23, 2024

Mirra Andreeva refuses to shake umpire’s hand after Madison Keys loss

Madison Keys #MadisonKeys

Teenager Mirra Andreeva was given a point penalty for throwing her racket and then refused to shake the umpire’s hand in her fourth-round loss to Madison Keys at Wimbledon on Monday.

The 16-year-old Russian, who has been a crowd favourite on her debut at the All England Club, looked on course to becoming the youngest player since Anna Kournikova in 1997 to make the quarter-finals when she led by a set and 4-1. But Keys fought back and Andreeva was given her first warning by the umpire, Julie Kjendlie, after flinging her racket across the grass when she lost the second set tie-break.

She then appeared to throw her racket again when Keys forced deuce at 2-5 in the deciding set, earning a second warning and an automatic point penalty, which gave her opponent a match point.

Andreeva argued her case with Kjendlie, saying: “Do you understand what you are doing? I didn’t throw the racket. I slid. It’s the wrong decision. I slid and then I fell.” But the decision stood and Keys won the next point to clinch a 3-6, 7-6 (4), 6-2 victory, with Andreeva heading to the net to shake hands with her opponent but walking straight past the umpire.

Andreeva had feared being defaulted after whacking a ball angrily into the crowd at the French Open.

For nearly an hour, Andreeva was completely in control, with Keys making error after error. The American pulled herself together just in time, changing her tactics to follow her big groundstrokes to the net and even breaking serve with a left-handed forehand winner.

By the time the second set tie-break came around, it was Keys who had the momentum and Andreeva was unable to shrug off her disappointment at the beginning of the deciding set. She briefly threatened to turn things around again but Keys kept her composure while Andreeva lost hers and with it the match.

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Simon Cambers’ report to follow …

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