Carlos Alcaraz He made Stefanos Tsitsipas desperate for the sixth time on court, beating him for the second time in a row in the Roland Garros quarterfinals. He has a measure taken, the Greek suffers.
Desperate, he looked in vain for a gap in the Spanish system, which prevailed 6-3, 7-6 (3), 6-4. Whether it was a personal escape valve or an attempt to destabilize Alcaraz, the Greek took the referee’s protest route, directly accusing the Murcian of prolonging the scream that accompanied his holding the ball too long.
“I didn’t complain about it, but it was frustrating. When I was about to hit… and a few moments before I got hit, I could still hear the whine. Not during the hit, just before,” Tsitipas tried repeatedly with the French chair umpire Aurelite Tourte, one of the best in the current refereeing ranks.
The one who gets the warning is the Greek, for ‘teaching’, taking advice from his father and coach at the wrong time.
Carlos Alcaraz replied Chisip new media. With as much elegance as strength. Without entering into controversy but positioning himself firmly.
“I heard him during the change of sides during the tiebreak, he complained and I listened to him. What can I say? He can complain. I’m nobody. He can tell the referee if he was disturbed. I don’t think there was an extension that might bother him, but everyone is free to give their opinion.
Source: La Verdad

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