The Future of Tennis by Philip Slayton

The Future of Tennis by Philip Slayton

Author:Philip Slayton
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781510727465
Publisher: Skyhorse
Published: 2018-07-01T16:00:00+00:00


He can play a good game of tennis.

To play Fognini on one of his great days is hell.

In June 2016 he married Flavia Pennetta, another Italian tennis star, who earlier had had a disastrous and very public love affair with Carlos Moyá, former world No. 1. In 2015, Pennetta won the US Open and then retired. One newspaper reported: “Beaming down from the stands in celebration of her triumph on Saturday was the Italian tennis radical, Fabio Fognini. He had put Nadal out of the men’s draw in the third round, returned to Italy to wind down and rushed back to New York when Pennetta made the final.” In May 2017, the couple had a son, Federico. At the July 5, 2017, Wimbledon press conference, Fognini was asked, “How is fatherhood? Do you think it has an effect on your tennis?” He replied: “Well, I don’t know. You have to say. I mean, at the moment I’m really happy, happy because my family is well, they’re rightly. Baby is good. I’m good, too. I’m feeling really good. Nothing else to say. We are really happy, enjoy when I went home these three weeks before coming here.” Tennis wags hoped that marriage to Pennetta would calm Fognini down. It didn’t.

“Troia!” “Bocchinara!” (“Whore!” “Cocksucker!”) That’s what Fognini called the female chair umpire, the Swede Louise Engzell, at the first round of the 2017 US Open (he lost the match). Fognini later apologized for his behavior and explained that everyone has bad days. “I’m only human,” he said. An outraged Rafael Nadal said that the International Tennis Federation was too slow in responding to Fognini’s obscene tirade. Fognini, bizarrely, said he was prepared to discuss his mistake with schoolchildren. “I’m prepared to enter a tennis school, or any school, and speak to the kids and say what I think—which is that I made a mistake and it won’t happen again.” He told a reporter, “I am working with a mental trainer. . . . cried when I was alone, I admit it.” In October 2017 the Grand Slam Board banned Fognini from the US Open and one other grand slam, a ban to take effect if he committed another major offense before the end of 2019. It also fined him $96,000, reduced to $48,000 if he stays on good behavior for the next two years (in addition to the $24,000 he already paid on-site at the time he insulted Engzell). This punishment was criticized by many as inadequate and taking too long to impose. One commentator asked, “Well-intentioned as the board’s decision in the Fognini case may be, it still leaves a question hanging: What does a guy have to do to get suspended around here?”



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.