Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
Thanks Megan, I can't view Ti-Amie's post, so that helped
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
Did Ti-Amie post about this earlier and I'm not finding it? Hate to double-post.Fastbackss wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2024 10:24 pm Thanks Megan, I can't view Ti-Amie's post, so that helped
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
I didn't post about this. They might be referring to another post?meganfernandez wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2024 10:46 pmDid Ti-Amie post about this earlier and I'm not finding it? Hate to double-post.Fastbackss wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2024 10:24 pm Thanks Megan, I can't view Ti-Amie's post, so that helped
“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
Oops. Ti's post from Reddit wasn't showing; I presumed you were in response to it.meganfernandez wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2024 10:46 pmDid Ti-Amie post about this earlier and I'm not finding it? Hate to double-post.Fastbackss wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2024 10:24 pm Thanks Megan, I can't view Ti-Amie's post, so that helped
I just looked and it's there now. It's the one about iga and sponsorship deals
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
oof, that's rough. Puts some things into perspective and I hope it gets an investigation.
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
Sadly this is fairly common. In particular with female players coming from modest background.
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
I think it's quite common with boys too, unfortunately (Agassi, Tomic are two top of mind examples).
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
I am not sure. Just from the top of my head, in the WTA:
Capriati, Graf (at a different and lower level), Pierce, Lucic, Dokic, Sharapova (Juri's behavior was appalling at times), Arantxa (different type of abuse, for sure).
I am missing a few, I know.
Capriati, Graf (at a different and lower level), Pierce, Lucic, Dokic, Sharapova (Juri's behavior was appalling at times), Arantxa (different type of abuse, for sure).
I am missing a few, I know.
Ego figere omnia et scio supellectilem
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
It does happen with boys too, but significantly less at least by the time they're on the tour already. The unifying theme is parents (fathers mostly) trying to live via their kids.
I wish cases like Rodger's would be more standard. Parents saw that the kid is athletic, sent him to tennis club (football too), he turned out to be very good and highly competitive and that's it. I've never read anywhere of them plotting to become rich via him.
I wish cases like Rodger's would be more standard. Parents saw that the kid is athletic, sent him to tennis club (football too), he turned out to be very good and highly competitive and that's it. I've never read anywhere of them plotting to become rich via him.
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
I'm not sure I would put Yuri Sharapov in this category. He was obnoxious against some others and probably tried to own her coaching too much, but I think it's a big stretch to say he was abusive towards Maria (beyond "accepted" levels of parental mistakes). I think he's more leaning towards the Srdjan Djokovic direction of not shutting your mouth when you should than abuse.
Aravane Rezai is another one that comes to mind. I also still think there's a lot left unsaid about Richard Williams.
I think the abuse against boys often gets underreported/unnoticed.
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
You're probably right about this. Also men are older when they start earning serious money. That must have some effect too.
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
Sigh
“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
Been a fan of him for a long time.
But this is, to me, one of the cardinal sins. It is not too hard to see that anything related to Saudi Arabia is just dipping your hands into blood money.
Sorry, Rafa. You're a hoe.
But this is, to me, one of the cardinal sins. It is not too hard to see that anything related to Saudi Arabia is just dipping your hands into blood money.
Sorry, Rafa. You're a hoe.
Ego figere omnia et scio supellectilem
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
Germany's top tennis player to go on trial for abuse in May
Jonathan Crane
14 hours ago
The German tennis player Alexander Zverev is contesting allegations he physically abused ex-girlfriend, Brenda Patea. He is contesting a penalty order and fine from October last year.
Alexander Zverev, Germany's No. 1 tennis player, will go on trial for physical abuse in May, the Berlin criminal court has confirmed to DW.
Zverev, the Olympic champion in Tokyo in 2021, is accused of "physically abusing a woman and damaging her health during an argument." The woman, named by Zverev's lawyers, is his ex-girlfriend, Brenda Patea. The 26-year-old Zverev "rejects" the allegations.
In a statement to DW, Lisa Jani, a spokesperson for the court, wrote: "The main hearing in the case will begin in May 2024. We will announce the details in due course."
In October last year, Zverev was given a penalty order by the court and fined €450,000 ($492,700). For lesser crimes in Germany, a penalty order can be issued when a judge believes the case is straightforward and doesn't warrant a trial. The accused can contest the order, maintaining the presumption of innocence, which is why Zverev will now face a public hearing.
Jani said that Zverev wouldn't necessarily have to appear in person, but that he could be ordered to testify by the judge. The charge carries a maximum sentence of five years in jail, although a prison term for Zverev would be "highly unlikely" given the nature of the penalty order.
Refuting the penalty order at the time, Zverev's lawyers, Schertz Bergmann, called the proceedings "scandalous," adding that "there can be no question of a fair trial." The law firm questioned the forensic evidence used by the court.
Schertz Bergmann has also sought to quash media reports of the case and its details. In December, German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung was forced to take down an article featuring an interview with Patea, because the article went beyond "the limits of permissible suspicious reporting," according to a statement from the law firm.
Trial could coincide with French Open
Zverev himself has occasionally spoken out against the allegations, giving reporters short shrift for asking about them. At a press conference in November, he described the penalty order as "complete (expletive)."
"Anybody that has semi-standard IQ levels knows what this is all about," Zverev said.
The ATP Tour, which runs men's tennis, had previously investigated Zverev over claims he assaulted another ex-girlfriend, Olya Sharypova. The ATP closed that investigation in January last year, citing "insufficient evidence."
In the absence of any domestic abuse policy at the ATP, Zverev has been allowed to continue competing despite the latest allegations. He is currently in Melbourne for the Australian Open, the year's first Grand Slam tournament, and is set to play his first-round match against a fellow German, Dominik Koepfer, on Tuesday.
It is unclear how the trial will impact his tennis schedule. The French Open, the year's second Grand Slam, starts on May 26.
Zverev's lawyers told DW they wouldn't be adding to their statement released in October.
Edited by: James Thorogood
https://www.dw.com/en/german-no-1-tenni ... a-67981216
Jonathan Crane
14 hours ago
The German tennis player Alexander Zverev is contesting allegations he physically abused ex-girlfriend, Brenda Patea. He is contesting a penalty order and fine from October last year.
Alexander Zverev, Germany's No. 1 tennis player, will go on trial for physical abuse in May, the Berlin criminal court has confirmed to DW.
Zverev, the Olympic champion in Tokyo in 2021, is accused of "physically abusing a woman and damaging her health during an argument." The woman, named by Zverev's lawyers, is his ex-girlfriend, Brenda Patea. The 26-year-old Zverev "rejects" the allegations.
In a statement to DW, Lisa Jani, a spokesperson for the court, wrote: "The main hearing in the case will begin in May 2024. We will announce the details in due course."
In October last year, Zverev was given a penalty order by the court and fined €450,000 ($492,700). For lesser crimes in Germany, a penalty order can be issued when a judge believes the case is straightforward and doesn't warrant a trial. The accused can contest the order, maintaining the presumption of innocence, which is why Zverev will now face a public hearing.
Jani said that Zverev wouldn't necessarily have to appear in person, but that he could be ordered to testify by the judge. The charge carries a maximum sentence of five years in jail, although a prison term for Zverev would be "highly unlikely" given the nature of the penalty order.
Refuting the penalty order at the time, Zverev's lawyers, Schertz Bergmann, called the proceedings "scandalous," adding that "there can be no question of a fair trial." The law firm questioned the forensic evidence used by the court.
Schertz Bergmann has also sought to quash media reports of the case and its details. In December, German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung was forced to take down an article featuring an interview with Patea, because the article went beyond "the limits of permissible suspicious reporting," according to a statement from the law firm.
Trial could coincide with French Open
Zverev himself has occasionally spoken out against the allegations, giving reporters short shrift for asking about them. At a press conference in November, he described the penalty order as "complete (expletive)."
"Anybody that has semi-standard IQ levels knows what this is all about," Zverev said.
The ATP Tour, which runs men's tennis, had previously investigated Zverev over claims he assaulted another ex-girlfriend, Olya Sharypova. The ATP closed that investigation in January last year, citing "insufficient evidence."
In the absence of any domestic abuse policy at the ATP, Zverev has been allowed to continue competing despite the latest allegations. He is currently in Melbourne for the Australian Open, the year's first Grand Slam tournament, and is set to play his first-round match against a fellow German, Dominik Koepfer, on Tuesday.
It is unclear how the trial will impact his tennis schedule. The French Open, the year's second Grand Slam, starts on May 26.
Zverev's lawyers told DW they wouldn't be adding to their statement released in October.
Edited by: James Thorogood
https://www.dw.com/en/german-no-1-tenni ... a-67981216
“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
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Re: Tennis Related - Off Court Serious Issues
It's puzzling when you consider how much he has put into his own academy. It's clearly a passion, but...
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