French Open chief backs human judgment after line-call controversy

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Paris, June 1: French Open director Amelie Mauresmo said on Monday that electronic line-calling is not 100% reliable on clay courts and has no immediate plans to introduce the technology at Roland Garros despite a controversial call during Casper Ruud’s loss against Joao Fonseca.
Ruud, a two-time runner-up in Paris, ultimately lost the fourth-round match on Sunday evening. During the second-set tiebreaker, with Ruud up 8-7, a spectator in the crowd shouted that a forehand down the line hit by Fonseca had landed out. The chair umpire came down to check the mark and ruled that the Brazilian’s shot was in, handing him the point.
An electronic line-calling on television showed the ball was out.
Mauresmo, however, remains old school and said on Monday she still picks humans over technology, because it can’t be trusted entirely.
“What we observed at the clay-court tournaments leading up to Roland Garros is that the reliability of this system is not absolute,” she told journalists. “As of today, the machine is not 100 percent reliable, so we continue to place our confidence in human officials.”
Wimbledon, the oldest Grand Slam tournament, replaced line judges with electronic line-calling last year. The move made the French Open the only major without some form of electronic line-calling. The Australian Open and US Open already had eliminated line judges and only have chair umpires on court.
The WTA and ATP have added machine-generated rulings for events on red clay, but Grand Slam hosts can do what they want. Although disputes over marks are not rare at Roland Garros, Mauresmo said that many players recognize that the system is not entirely reliable on clay, a live surface constantly changing with weather conditions that poses challenges to accurate digital tracking. (AP)

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