logo
Wimbledon hit with electronic line call controversy as Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova says game was ‘stolen' from her

Wimbledon hit with electronic line call controversy as Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova says game was ‘stolen' from her

CNN07-07-2025
Wimbledon organizers have apologized and explained that 'human error' was the reason behind the electronic line-calling system being turned off during a match on Sunday.
During the first set of the fourth-round clash between Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova and Sonay Kartal on Centre Court, a backhand from Kartal went long but there was no 'out' call from the electronic system, which has replaced human line umpires at Wimbledon this year.
Pavlyuchenkova, who was one point away from winning that game, stopped playing with the ball landing outside the court. Umpire Nico Helwerth called for the match to be paused, while the automated system said 'stop, stop,' leading to confusion from both players and the fans in attendance.
Helwerth informed the crowd that he was going to check if the system was 'up and running' before spending time on the phone.
After a short delay, he said that the electronic system 'was unfortunately unable to track the last point,' which was subsequently replayed.
Kartal went on to win the point and break Pavlyuchenkova to take a 5-4 lead. In the change of ends, the Russian could be heard saying to Helwerth: 'You took the game away from me … they stole the game from me. They stole it.'
The automated system did not pick up on balls landing out on three occasions in the game, with Helwerth calling the other two. The All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club (AELTC) said that Helwerth did not know the system had not been running.
After the match had finished – with Pavlyuchenkova eventually winning 7-6(3), 6-4 to reach the quarterfinals – a spokesperson for the AELTC said that the system had been deactivated in error by 'those operating the system' and that a full investigation had taken place.
'We have apologized to the players involved,' the spokesperson said in a statement to CNN. 'We continue to have full confidence in the accuracy of the ball tracking technology.
'The live ELC (electronic line-calling) system relies on the Hawk-Eye operators, the Review Official and the technology to work in harmony. This did not happen. In this instance there was a human error and as a consequence we have fully reviewed our processes and made the appropriate changes.'
It added that Helwerth had 'followed the established process' of replaying the point if the system goes down and it's unclear whether the ball was in or out.
After booking her spot in the next round, Pavlyuchenkova called the whole situation 'confusing,' in particular when the umpire ordered the point to be replayed instead of awarding it to her.
'I think it's good to raise this subject for the future,' Pavlyuchenkova told reporters.
'Because if anything like that happens in a very important moment of the match, I think we should have a wire system like in football. Then it's clear for everybody and we can move on right away instead of just guessing.'
The automated line-calling system has been a big talking point at this year's Wimbledon. Great Britain's top-ranked players – Jack Draper and Emma Raducanu – have both expressed their doubts about the system, with Raducanu calling it 'dodgy.'
Switzerland's Belina Bencic said that the new automated system has been a topic of discussion among players in the locker room.
The introduction of technology to replace line judges at Wimbledon follows many other tournaments around the world, including the Australian Open and the US Open.
Following her win on Sunday, Pavlyuchenkova said that Helwerth 'probably was scared to take such a big decision' with the technology not working and called for more human intervention.
'That's why we have a chair umpire,' she said. 'Otherwise, I think soon let's just play without them and then we're going to have everything automatic. I think we are losing a little bit of the charm of actually having human beings, ballboys.
'Like during Covid, we didn't have ballboys. It just becomes a little bit weird and robot sort of orientated.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BBC says it is ‘untenable' for Gregg Wallace to host 'MasterChef' after sexual misconduct report
BBC says it is ‘untenable' for Gregg Wallace to host 'MasterChef' after sexual misconduct report

Washington Post

time34 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

BBC says it is ‘untenable' for Gregg Wallace to host 'MasterChef' after sexual misconduct report

LONDON — The BBC said Monday it will no longer work with 'MasterChef' host Gregg Wallace after a report found that dozens of misconduct allegations made against the hit cooking show presenter were upheld. The report, led by a law firm, said 45 out of the 83 allegations made against Wallace during his time on the show between 2005 and 2018 were substantiated. It said the majority of the claims related to 'inappropriate sexual language and humor,' with one incident of unwelcome physical contact. Wallace, 60, stepped away from hosting the hit BBC reality show, which is made by an independent production company, last year while an investigation was launched into allegations made by multiple women that he made inappropriate sexual comments and behaved inappropriately over 17 years. The BBC has come under pressure over how it handles sexual misconduct allegations and how Wallace had continued to front some of its most popular shows for so long despite the complaints. The broadcaster issued a statement of apology, adding Wallace's 'return to MasterChef is untenable.' 'The BBC has informed Mr Wallace we have no plans to work with him in future,' it said. 'Although the full extent of these issues were not known at the relevant time, opportunities were missed to address this behavior, both by the production companies running MasterChef and the BBC.' The broadcaster previously said that Wallace was warned by his employers after a complaint in 2018, and an internal investigation at the time found his behavior was 'unacceptable and unprofessional.' The latest investigation found that there was little or no formal training or clear escalation procedures in place for staff — many of those working on the show were freelancers — leading to underreporting and normalization of inappropriate behaviour. Wallace has strongly denied the claims. In December, he drew an angry backlash after he alleged that complaints about his behavior came from 'a handful of middle-class women of a certain age.' In a statement posted on his Instagram account last week, he said: 'I will not go quietly. I will not be cancelled for convenience. I was tried by media and hung out to dry well before the facts were established.' 'MasterChef' is one of the BBC's most popular and long-running competition shows, and has been adapted in other countries including 'MasterChef Australia.'

Wolves confident of completing Jhon Arias transfer from Fluminense
Wolves confident of completing Jhon Arias transfer from Fluminense

New York Times

time39 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Wolves confident of completing Jhon Arias transfer from Fluminense

Wolverhampton Wanderers are confident of completing a deal to sign winger Jhon Arias from Fluminense. The Premier League club are nearing an agreement for the 27-year-old to join for a fee of around £17.3million ($23.3m). Arias, a Colombia international, was one of the breakout stars of the Club World Cup, with his performances helping Brazilian side Fluminense reach the semi-finals of the tournament. He won three Superior Player of the Match awards and had a particularly impressive performance in his side's victory over Inter on June 30. Last season, Arias was deployed in several positions for Fluminense. He played on either wing, as a central and second striker, and in attacking midfield. However, he played the majority of his football on the right wing and ended the campaign with four goals and 13 assists in 34 games. Arias has also scored three goals in 29 appearances for Colombia, playing in all six games of his nation's 2024 Copa America campaign as they were defeated in the final by Argentina. Advertisement If the deal is completed, Arias will become Wolves' third signing of the summer following the arrival of Fer Lopez from Celta Vigo and Jorgen Strand Larsen's loan move being made permanent. Wolves have had several forwards leave the club this summer. Matheus Cunha joined Manchester United in June, Pablo Sarabia joined Qatari side Al-Arabi SC, and Carlos Forbs returned to parent club Ajax following the conclusion of his loan spell at Molineux.

Wimbledon 2025: Iga Swiatek wins maiden Wimbledon title as Amanda Anisimova suffers nightmare day
Wimbledon 2025: Iga Swiatek wins maiden Wimbledon title as Amanda Anisimova suffers nightmare day

Yahoo

time40 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Wimbledon 2025: Iga Swiatek wins maiden Wimbledon title as Amanda Anisimova suffers nightmare day

It could not have been much more than 30 metres' distance between them, but they felt worlds apart. While Iga Swiatek was clambering up the rows of seats towards her box to celebrate her maiden Wimbledon title, Amanda Anisimova sat slumped in her chair, a towel over her face, desperate for the pristine green of Centre Court to just swallow her up after suffering the scarring ignominy of losing a Grand Slam final 6-0 6-0. Advertisement Right from the off, when she went 0-40 down and was broken on serve in the very first service game, the atmosphere was decidedly eery. When would she overcome her stage fright and land a blow on Swiatek? The answer never came. This will always be remembered as the Wimbledon final over in 57 minutes. The galling nature of Anisimova's defeat felt it might threaten how we come to remember Swiatek's crowning moment. But the American battled through the tears in her on-court loser's speech to praise the champion, to force a smile, even to crack a couple of jokes. Swiatek, she rightly said, was a deserving champion. The 2018 junior Wimbledon champion has levelled up. She was powerful, precise, marvellous throughout. The ruthless manner of her victory may have left some on Centre Court feeling cheated of their pricey tickets but was just a measure of her exceptional level all fortnight. She can thank her opponent for having knocked out the world No1 Aryna Sabalenka in the semi-final, but there were no more gimmes beyond. She had dropped just one set all tournament, winning her semi-final 6-2 6-0 before becoming only the second player ever to win a women's Grand Slam final with a double bagel, after Steffi Graf at the 1988 French Open. This was a first Wimbledon final for both, and Swiatek is still yet to lose a Grand Slam final, claiming her sixth. Anisimova, a Roland-Garros semi-finalist at just 17 years old in 2019, was powerless to quell her own nerves in her first Grand Slam final. She froze, eternally hamstrung, unable to respond to the crowd's regular best efforts to boost her into action. Advertisement The action was almost entirely Swiatek's. Forehand winners slapped into the corner, 119mph aces, drop shots Anisimova could only stare at. Her opponent all too often fired beyond the baseline when she was not hitting double faults or merely reacting with resignation to Swiatek's brilliance. Anisimova won just 26 per cent of points off her first serve and put only 45 per cent of her first serves in — no recipe for success in any match, let alone the final of Wimbledon. How long had it been since Swiatek, the first-ever Polish Wimbledon singles champion, first dreamed of lifting the Venus Rosewater Dish on Centre Court? 'Honestly, I didn't even dream,' she laughed afterwards. 'For me, it was way too far. I want to thank my team, because I feel they believed in me more than I did.' A fortnight of peerless tennis on a surface previously seen as her weakness has delivered the 24-year-old the greatest moment of her career so far. Anisimova, 23 and born only three months after Swiatek, first faced the Pole nine years ago in a Junior Fed Cup match in Hungary that Swiatek won 6-4 6-2. Their next meeting and first at professional level proved nothing short of a nightmare for her. Advertisement The 13th seed was not only shackled by the grand occasion and by the relentless Swiatek but also mired by her own negative body language. The American glared at the turf, smacked her racquet against her thigh, or threw her head to the heavens as the games kept passing her by. Plenty found it hard to watch. Having lost the first set without claiming a single game and when 0-30 down on serve in the first game of the second, she was bouncing a ball down with her racquet when it landed on her shoe and rolled away. Here, in microcosm, was her whole helpless experience, the final and the day all just getting further and further away from her. Just as for her conqueror, though, this has been an excellent fortnight. Mustering the words when surely none felt like coming, she acknowledged her mother for flying in to watch her, and then thanked the crowd. 'Even though I ran out of gas today, you guys have still lifted me up. 'I know I didn't have enough today, but I always believe in myself and hope to be back here someday.' There's a very decent chance she will. Next week, she will break into the world's top-10 for the very first time. Advertisement Swiatek has been there for some time, though this has been an admittedly testing year for the former world No1, missing a month and three tournaments in late 2024 after testing positive for the banned substance trimetazidine and having to work her way back to the summit. In May, she was left devastated by failing to win a fourth successive French Open title. But, in the long-run, a blessing in disguise? She regrouped immediately, switching with laser focus to the grass-court season. She has swatted aside everyone in her path — Anisimova, however cruel this was, just the latest. Swiatek is, without doubt, the greatest player of her generation, this her sixth Grand Slam title and with so many more still to be claimed. In her first Wimbledon final, she was particularly brutal. A demolition job in less than an hour. In no time, a win for all time.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store