An inch becomes a foot
Shea is so right on this one. I'm two years older than he is, and when I still played competitive tennis, footfaulters drove many of us nuts. Not the ones that touched the lines with their foot, but the ones who stretched that inch to a foot whenever it was an important point, especially a break point. Some of those people actually think they are only footfaulting by an inch. Some it is more deliberate.
But to give a kid the chance to say, "Oh, they don't really call footfaults unless you go way into the court...". You touch the line; it's got to be a footfault. If you want to review it, fine; it would only take a couple of cameras, not the expensive system that is the current challenge system. (I think they should have that to decide whether a player actually had a play on a ball when an overule takes place.)
We've all run pro-ams where the ams had terrible footfaults. I told the refs to call them. I don't think the refs always listened to me,but when ams are playing for tens of thousands of dollars or more (in each match) as they were in my tournaments, you had to draw a line in the sand. My line was: no footfaults allowed. If you see it, you call it.
Roving umps are supposed to call those at junior events (in addition to unsportsmanlike violations),but most are hesitant to do this. The result is you get kids who routinely footfault 3 to 6 inches or more when the points get tight. It's bad enough when you don't have linespeople or refs, but when you have linesmen, they have to call what they see.
There is no possible way to instruct the linesmen except to call what they see. How about, "Well if it's a nice rally and it's pretty close to the line and ..." Of course, that's a ridiculous comparison, but it's equally ridiculous, especially in the US Open, to tell a linesman to be subjective in when they apply the footfault rule. (Incidentally, Serena said they had been calling them on her the whole tournament.) It's not the lineswoman's fault that Serena stepped on the line. What if she missed the serve by a millimeter as shown by the instant replay? No way the linesperson could actually see that, but if they call it and it survives the challenge, the linesperson was right. If the linesperson hadn't called such a hypothetical fault, it would probably be played and no one would ever know. So maybe we should just "play 2" whenever the error is within the margin of error of the challenge system. (It does have a margin of error that is greater than some of the misses that it calls.) I don't think so.
If a linesman sees something they gotta call it. If you are playing your buddy and you see his shot out or in, you gotta call what you see, or at least what you think you saw.
don brosseau
for 20 years, T.D for Huggy Bears Invitational
Originally posted by uspta502580821
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But to give a kid the chance to say, "Oh, they don't really call footfaults unless you go way into the court...". You touch the line; it's got to be a footfault. If you want to review it, fine; it would only take a couple of cameras, not the expensive system that is the current challenge system. (I think they should have that to decide whether a player actually had a play on a ball when an overule takes place.)
We've all run pro-ams where the ams had terrible footfaults. I told the refs to call them. I don't think the refs always listened to me,but when ams are playing for tens of thousands of dollars or more (in each match) as they were in my tournaments, you had to draw a line in the sand. My line was: no footfaults allowed. If you see it, you call it.
Roving umps are supposed to call those at junior events (in addition to unsportsmanlike violations),but most are hesitant to do this. The result is you get kids who routinely footfault 3 to 6 inches or more when the points get tight. It's bad enough when you don't have linespeople or refs, but when you have linesmen, they have to call what they see.
There is no possible way to instruct the linesmen except to call what they see. How about, "Well if it's a nice rally and it's pretty close to the line and ..." Of course, that's a ridiculous comparison, but it's equally ridiculous, especially in the US Open, to tell a linesman to be subjective in when they apply the footfault rule. (Incidentally, Serena said they had been calling them on her the whole tournament.) It's not the lineswoman's fault that Serena stepped on the line. What if she missed the serve by a millimeter as shown by the instant replay? No way the linesperson could actually see that, but if they call it and it survives the challenge, the linesperson was right. If the linesperson hadn't called such a hypothetical fault, it would probably be played and no one would ever know. So maybe we should just "play 2" whenever the error is within the margin of error of the challenge system. (It does have a margin of error that is greater than some of the misses that it calls.) I don't think so.
If a linesman sees something they gotta call it. If you are playing your buddy and you see his shot out or in, you gotta call what you see, or at least what you think you saw.
don brosseau
for 20 years, T.D for Huggy Bears Invitational
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