May 6, 2024
See the WORST out call at the Australian Open – after serve that was in by miles gets rejected

See the WORST out call at the Australian Open – after serve that was in by miles gets rejected

See the WORST bad call at the Australian Open – as players are left mystified as serve that was in by MILES goes down as a fault

<!–

<!–

<!–

<!–

<!–

<!–

A clearly incorrect call on the first point of a mixed doubles quarter-final left tennis fans completely baffled at the Australian Open on Tuesday.

Aussie John-Patrick Smith, partnered with Lizette Cabrera, hit a routine serve on Rod Laver Arena, only for a fault to be called in their match against Brazilian duo Rafael Matos and Luisa Stefani.

It wasn’t made by the chair umpire or a linesperson – it was done electronically by Hawk Eye technology.

Tournaments officials introduced Hawk Eye to Melbourne Park in 2021 – and the reaction has been mixed ever since. 

The quartet of stars on court were understandably stunned at the initial call as they all stood around bemused before the point was eventually replayed.

Australian John-Patrick Smith was understandably bemused by the 'fault' call from Hawk Eye during his mixed doubles quarter-final

Australian John-Patrick Smith was understandably bemused by the 'fault' call from Hawk Eye during his mixed doubles quarter-final

Australian John-Patrick Smith was understandably bemused by the ‘fault’ call from Hawk Eye during his mixed doubles quarter-final

He spoke with playing partner Lizette Cabrera at length - before the point was eventually replayed

He spoke with playing partner Lizette Cabrera at length - before the point was eventually replayed

He spoke with playing partner Lizette Cabrera at length – before the point was eventually replayed

Speaking in commentary, Channel 9’s Mathew Thompson playfully compared the obvious on-court error to the NRL Bunker seen in rugby league.

Loathed by many footy fans, game-day video officials can access up to 20 high definition camera angles, including high-speed cameras with zoom functions and split screens.

They also have access to playback control for all decisions that are reviewed.

Some feel the video technology is too slow and ruins the flow of live NRL matches.

Matos and Stefani proved too strong for the local hopes, winning in straight sets 6-3 6-4 to move through to the semi-finals on Australia Day.

Source link