Coco Gauff overcame a slow start and an argument with the chair umpire to take a three-set win over Karolina Pliskova on Wednesday.
The win ends Pliskova’s 11-match winning streak.
After losing the first set, Gauff had built a lead in the second set. Then, chair umpire Pierre Bacchi called out her serve at deuce after Pliskova returned it into the net.
“You called it out after she hit it,” Gauff could be heard telling the umpire, being urged on by the crowd. “The call was a late call.”
She later asked multiple times for the umpire to call the supervisor to help clarify the rules, although the umpire refused to call the supervisor. The total exchange went on for more than four minutes.
“I’m gonna ask her what the rule is,” Gauff said. “You can’t tell me the rule. If I’m questioning the rule you have to call the supervisor. That’s within my right, I know it is.
“You’re going to apologize after this match because you know you messed up,” she continued. “I’ve never questioned anything like this before.”
Coco Gauff is not happy with the umpire in her match against Pliskova.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) February 21, 2024
“You called it out after she hit it.”
“Can you not cut me off for two seconds?”
“Call the supervisor… you can’t deny me the supervisor. I’m gonna ask her what the rule is.”
Coco hit a serve that was… pic.twitter.com/QyfBN1q6D6
Footage of the moment appears to concede to Gauff’s point: the call of out came after Pliskova had hit the ball. Former U.S. tennis player Andy Roddick called out the moment, saying that Bacci was “completely wrong.”
“This is an absurd exchange for this umpire,” he wrote. “1. He’s completely wrong 2. He’s lying about being wrong. 3. She must have simply said 10 plus times, I’d like the supervisor. That’s not a judgement call. He simply needed to honor that normal request and call the supervisor. Coco did well here.”
Gauff, who was named a TIME Woman of the Year on Wednesday, said afterward that the argument “fueled” her.
“I think it just fueled me,” the U.S. Open champion said. “I feel confident that it was after. It’s ok. It’s just one point. That happens in tennis. Players make mistakes, everybody makes mistakes. It kind of went upward from there for me. … I was trying to tell myself to stay calm the next point. Sometimes I get angry and I go for too much. I was trying to let that not be the turning point for the set.
“Maybe I dragged it out a little longer than I needed to, but I did what I felt was best in that moment.”