logo
Katie Boulter ‘felt a lot of love' from response after revealing online abuse

Katie Boulter ‘felt a lot of love' from response after revealing online abuse

Independent4 hours ago

British number two Katie Boulter has received a 'really warm response' and 'a lot of love' after revealing the scale of abuse aimed at her online.
The 28-year-old shared her experiences, which included death threats, with BBC Sport to highlight the issue of players encountering toxic messages on social media.
Examples of the abuse included someone telling her to buy 'candles and a coffin for your entire family' with a reference to her 'grandmother's grave if she's not dead by tomorrow' and one stating she should 'go to hell' as she had cost the poster money.
Since her interview aired, Boulter has been inundated with support.
'I looked on my phone this morning and literally there were hundreds of messages of people reacting to it and every single person was just telling me to disregard it and how much they love me and appreciate me bringing this subject into light,' she said following victory over Lulu Sun in the first round of the Lexus Nottingham Open.
'It was a really warm response to it coming out and it was very nice to see.
'It's very rare that I go on it (social media) loads but I do notice things here and there and I felt a lot of love from it.'
Boulter believes much of the abuse comes from gamblers who have lost money and feels incidents can raise genuine concerns for her safety.
One message stated 'hope you get cancer'.
'I just wonder who the person is that has sent that,' she said in her BBC interview. 'I don't think it's something that I would ever say to my worst enemy. It's just an awful, awful thing to say to anyone. It's horrible.
'It just kind of shows how vulnerable we are. You really don't know if this person is on site. You really don't know if they're nearby or if they know where you live or anything like that.'
Boulter's compatriot Jack Draper said it was 'so easy to spread online hate', while her fiance, Australian player Alex de Minaur, also offered support.
Speaking after his opening match of the HSBC Championships at Queen's Club, Draper said: 'It's not easy, especially, I think she (Boulter) said, when you're younger and getting all this abuse, saying they will come around your house and do this and that. It's not nice.
'But, at the same time, I take comfort in knowing whoever's doing that is probably sat on their mum's couch, nailing a bag of Quavers with their pants on.'
The WTA and International Tennis Federation on Tuesday published their first report into online abuse of players after the launch of the Threat Matrix service last January.
The system operates across all major social media platforms and uses AI and human analysts to identify and tackle harassment, abuse and threats directed at players.
The report reveals 1.6million posts and comments were analysed, with around 8,000 directed at 458 players identified as abusive, violent or threatening.
Five players received 26 per cent of the total abuse, while 40 per cent of the messages were identified as coming from angry gamblers.
Fifteen accounts have been identified to law enforcement because of the serious and prolific nature of the messages, while details have been shared with security teams at tennis events to prevent individuals accessing venues.
A spokesperson for the WTA and ITF said: 'Protecting players and the wider tennis family from vile online threat and abuse is a key priority for us.
'Given the clear evidence highlighted by Threat Matrix on the link between angry gamblers and prolific online abuse and threat, we are calling for a constructive dialogue with the gambling industry to help tackle this issue.
'Everyone – betting operators, social media platforms, governing bodies, players and law enforcers – has a responsibility to make the online space a safer and more positive one. We hope the gambling industry responds constructively to our call for more action on their part.'
In response, a Betting and Gaming Council spokesperson told the PA news agency: 'BGC members do not tolerate abuse on social media, which has no place in betting or sport.'
Boulter was praised for highlighting the issue by the FIA's United Against Online Abuse campaign, a research-led coalition dedicated to tackling online abuse in sport.
A spokesperson said: 'Katie is incredibly brave for speaking out about the appalling online abuse and threats she has faced.
'Betting-related abuse has risen significantly in recent years and now presents a serious and growing threat to the safety, well-being and mental health of athletes.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

File on 4  Adult Gaming Centres
File on 4  Adult Gaming Centres

BBC News

time21 minutes ago

  • BBC News

File on 4 Adult Gaming Centres

High street gambling venues, known as adult gaming centres, promise a safe and sociable experience; the chance to have a chat, a coffee and a flutter, under the supervision of trained staff. And they're proving to be popular, with an increasing number springing up across the country, some of which are open 24 hours a day. But File on 4 Investigates hears concerns some venues are failing to protect people struggling with gambling addictions - with devastating consequences. AGC's are supposed to ensure staff are trained to spot problem gamblers and intervene. They also operate a self-exclusion scheme which allows problem gamblers to self-exclude from AGC's. Staff should intervene if they spot somebody who has self-exlcuded and should ask them to leave the premises. It's a sensible plan - but does it actually work? Reporter: Alastair Fee Producer: Ben Robinson Researcher: Michael Gaughan Technical Producer: Nicky Edwards Production Coordinator: Tim Fernley Editor: Carl Johnston

Woman, 21, who tried to smuggle drugs into prison inside a crisp packet for a stranger is jailed
Woman, 21, who tried to smuggle drugs into prison inside a crisp packet for a stranger is jailed

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Woman, 21, who tried to smuggle drugs into prison inside a crisp packet for a stranger is jailed

A woman used a packet of Quavers in an attempt to smuggle cannabis into prison while visiting an inmate that she did not know, a court has heard. Rahima Begom used a packet of the popular crisp to conceal the drugs and tobacco which she passed to HMP Wayland prisoner Kieron Nickels. However, the officers became suspicious and the drugs were found after the pair were searched, Norwich Crown Court heard. The court was told that Begom, 21, had visited Nickels, 25, who is serving eight years in custody for aggravated burglary. John Morgans, prosecuting, said she took the package from between her legs before hiding it with the Quavers packet before sliding it on the table. He added that the 4g of cannabis had a value of between £270 and £300 outside prison, the Eastern Daily Press reports. Inside the prison the value of the drugs - contained in two tubes - would have been around 'four and 10 times as much'. The pair were not known to each other before the prison visit on November 13, 2022, the court was told. Having both pleaded guilty to conveying a class A article, namely cannabis, into Wayland prison, the pair appeared in court on Tuesday Oliver Haswell, mitigating for Begom, of Sotherton Road, Eaton, Norwich, said she was 18 at the time of the offence and had shown 'immaturity, naivety and stupidity'. He added hat she knew she was to be paid for taking drugs into the prison but did not know what it was or how much. Damian Zelazowski, for Nickels, now of HMP Aylesbury, said that he had accrued a debt while inside which he had to pay off by helping get drugs into prison. Judge Alice Robinson jailed Nickels for eight months and sentenced Begom to two months imprisonment, suspended for 18 months.

I don't know if Lucy Letby's innocent or guilty. But I was Health Secretary when many of those babies died - and I believe her case MUST be re-examined: Bombshell intervention by JEREMY HUNT
I don't know if Lucy Letby's innocent or guilty. But I was Health Secretary when many of those babies died - and I believe her case MUST be re-examined: Bombshell intervention by JEREMY HUNT

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

I don't know if Lucy Letby's innocent or guilty. But I was Health Secretary when many of those babies died - and I believe her case MUST be re-examined: Bombshell intervention by JEREMY HUNT

Few criminal cases in modern British history have played on the public conscience quite like that of Lucy Letby. A neonatal nurse convicted of the worst betrayal of trust possible: the deliberate harming and killing of babies under her care. Letby's case stands alongside that of the GP Harold Shipman – who was sentenced to 15 life terms for murdering 15 patients but is thought to have killed at least 215 people in all – as one of the darkest moments in the history of the NHS.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store