‘I don’t play’: Furious Medvedev’s crude gesture
Daniil Medvedev was the latest big name to fall at the Paris Masters losing his temper and flipping the bird at the crowd after losing his match to Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov on Thursday (AEDT).
Medvedev, seeded third, opened Thursday’s play at Bercy by losing a marathon to 17th-ranked Dimitrov, 6-3, 6-7(4), 7-6(2) in a match that lasted two hours and 54 minutes.
As things began to unravel in the second set, Medvedev threatened to stop playing if the crowd kept whistling and jeering him as he was about to serve after he had thrown his racquet.
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The third-ranked Russian went back to his chair and complained to the referee before talking directly to the spectators in French.
“If there’s one who whistles, I don’t play,” Medvedev told the crowd. “You don’t whistle, I play. So, you shut your mouths.”
From that moment, the crowd overwhelmingly threw its support behind Dimitrov, and Medvedev appeared to make a rude hand gesture toward some spectators as he walked off the court after the loss.
“I play in Bercy much better when there is no crowd at all in attendance,” Medvedev joked afterward, referring to winning the Paris Masters title in 2020 during the pandemic in an empty arena. “That’s the only time I won the tournament.”
Asked if he had flipped the bird to the crowd, he replied: “I was looking at my fingernail, how could I do that in front of the friendly Paris-Bercy crowd?”
Dimitrov lost to Medvedev in the second round of the Erste Bank Open in Austria last week, but the Bulgarian hit 45 winners on this occasion compared to 22 for the Russian, who double-faulted eight times.
Dimitrov whipped a forehand passing shot to break for a 4-2 lead in the final set but he failed to serve out the match at 5-3 as Medvedev saved four match points, including one 47-shot rally.
Medvedev saved two more match points on his serve at 6-5 but Dimitrov jumped out to a 5-0 lead in the decisive tiebreaker and converted his seventh match point with a forehand volley.
Meantime, Novak Djokovic demonstrated his desire to finish the season as the No.1 men’s player for a record eighth time by beating Tomas Martin Etcheverry 6-3, 6-2 in the second round
Djokovic was competing in his first singles match since mid-September when he played for Serbia in the group stage of the Davis Cup.
“At the beginning of the match, it was a bit difficult for me to find the rhythm,” the top-seeded Djokovic said on court, “but at the end of the second set, it was really good.”
Djokovic won five straight games to take the opening set with an ace and lead 2-0 in the second set.
The Serbian player only faced one break point that he saved with a forehand cross-court winner at 1-0 in the second set.
A six-time champion at the Paris Masters, Djokovic increased his lead to 5-1 before converting his third match point when Etcheverry netted a backhand.
Djokovic can widen the gap with No.2 Carlos Alcaraz in the race for the year-end top spot after the Spaniard lost to qualifier Roman Safiullin.
Alcaraz is the only player who can overtake Djokovic after Daniil Medvedev dropped out of contention after he was beaten by Grigor Dimitrov 6-3, 6-7(4), 7-6(2).
Djokovic had racked up 500 more points than Alcaraz this season before the Paris Masters.
Djokovic won’t be able to clinch the year-end No.1 spot in Paris since Alcaraz still gets 10 points for his second-round defeat.
There are 1,000 points for the Paris Masters winner and 1,500 points for a perfect run at the ATP Finals.
Djokovic holds the men’s record with seven year-end No.1 finishes, one more than Pete Sampras. Women’s tennis great Steffi Graf holds the record with eight.
“Of course, my greatest motivation is still love for the game. I really like competing. So, as simple as that,” Djokovic had told a news conference on Saturday.
“And then, you know, I always have goals, you know, and to win another slam, to be No.1 again, to finish the year as No.1. Those are let’s say the big goals.”
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