finals. the chair umpire noticing serena was looking at her coach and the ref pen all her. she said she was not taking coaching tips. i didn t get coaching. you make an announcement that i didn t get coaching. i don t cheat. i didn t get coaching. how can you say that? you need to make an apology. you owe me an apology. i have never cheated in my life. i have a daughter and i do what s right for her and i ve never cheated. you owe me an apologies. she showed frustration losing that point and then shattering her racket and gets penalized for that taking a point away. later as she was nearly losing the second set the two go at it again. serena calling the umpire a thief. he flags her for verbal abuse. that sparks her to talk to an
i didn t get coaching. i didn t get coaching. you need to take you need to make an announcement that i didn t get coaching. i don t cheat. i didn t get coaching. how can you say that? you need to you need you owe me an apology. you owe me an apology. i have never cheated in my life. i have a daughter and i stand for what s right for her and i have never cheated. you owe me an apology. so this went on for quite some time and williams coach later actually admitted to coaching from the stands, adding that all coaches do it. still fuming after osaka goes on to score a break point, williams has more words for ramos, accusing the umpire from stealing a point from her. serena was watching her coach give her hand signals. verbal abuse. are you kidding me?
one, it s very harsh penalties against losing a game against serena williams for essentially having an emotional moment because she felt like she was being called a cheat. when i saw that clip, i also saw it as a black woman, because black women and the intersection of stereotypes about women, but also stereotypes about black people, where being an angry black woman is a problem. so it s being more intimidating and then the penalties being harsher. there s a lot of conversation about carlos ramos being a stickler for the rules. clearly he is, with you the issue isn t whether he s a stickler for the rules but whether he s a stickler in the same way for women. right. let s listen foremore to serena williams demanding an apology. i didn t get coaching. i didn t get coaching. you need to make an announcement i didn t get coaching.
i don t cheat. i didn t get coaching. how could you say that? you need to you owe me an apology. i have never cheated in my life. i have a daughter and i stand for what s right with her. i have never cheated her. that comment, i have a daughter, and it shows you how quickly people change when you become a parent, your place in society, your desire to show a moral face to your child, i m not a cheater and i would never want my daughter to see this or hear about this and think maybe mommy cheated. as soon as you have children, you cross that threshold and want to start being a better person and create a better world for them. that jumped out at me. she s allowed alexis to be so much a part of her public presentation. she s in the commercials, all over her instagram. so he s proud of being a mother. and so you, carlos, are calling her a cheater, right?
the house of representatives and make sure there are real checks and balances in washington! announcer: this is new day weekend with victor blackwell and christi paul. good morning to you. so grateful to have you with us. yes. 20-year-old upsets a tennis legend to win her first grand slam title, but that may be the last thing somebody remembers about this u.s. open match. likely about serena williams clashing with this chair umpire she demanded an apology and got docked a game, instead. take a look at this. you need to make an announcement that i didn t get coaching. i don t cheat. i didn t get coaching. how can you say that? you need to you need you owe me an apology! you owe me an apology. i have never cheated in my life! i have a daughter and i stand what is right for her and i have never cheated and you owe me an