Turbulent times at Riverview

Wimbledon chair-umpire Fergus Murphy will be hoping for a less turbulent time at the big event than he endured in the ITF Futures…

Wimbledon chair-umpire Fergus Murphy will be hoping for a less turbulent time at the big event than he endured in the ITF Futures at Riverview yesterday.

Murphy was forced to default an irascible Italian, Igor Gaudi after a spate of chair-kicking, court violations, and varied obscenities. The Italian who surprised last week's winner, Michael Hill of Australia, was on the brink of a straight-sets defeat to Ireland's Owen Casey when be earned the ultimate sanction after an hour and 27 minutes.

A well-behaved Casey had won the first set and had reached vantage point for a break back at 4-3 when Murphy was obliged to act. Referee Steve Mehigan said afterwards, "the player was defaulted following three different court violations: racquet abuse, visual obsenity and audible obsenity. It was quite unusual in that there was no confrontation. The umpire followed the code of conduct."

Casey, now in the quarter-finals for the second week, said "we both had opportunities to give vent to our feelings. He expressed himself, I didn't. It could happen to me next week. Tennis is like that."

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Things were much quieter on an adjacent court as Ireland number one Scott Barron bowed out to number four seed Yahiya Doumbia (Senegal) 6-4, 6-4. Doumbia was once ranked 74 in the world and played against Ireland in Davis Cup in Limerick a few years ago.