Denis Shapovalov won’t face any further sanctions after being defaulted from his Mubadala Citi DC Open quarter-final showdown with Ben Shelton on Friday night. The match ended in controversy, with Shelton progressing to the last four where he lost to Italian ace Flavio Cobolli.
The quarter-final encounter proved to be a tight affair, with Shelton edging a tiebreak in the first set. And the second set also headed into a tiebreak as the two players couldn’t be separated after 12 games.
Shapovalov was guilty of three consecutive unforced errors deep into the tiebreak as he gifted his opponent three match points. And the Canadian proceeded to throw his racket to the ground, before palming and kicking it in anger.
Shapovalov then turned his attention to a member of the crowd as he got involved in a heated exchange with a fan. The player reportedly swore at the spectator, with the chair umpire opting to hand him a code violation for verbal abuse.
Shapovalov protested that he was within his rights to “tell off” the spectator who had heckled him. But he was ultimately defaulted after the supervisor was beckoned onto the court.
A statement from the ATP Tour read: “ATP has reviewed an appeal from Denis Shapovalov following his default from the quarter-finals of the ATP 500 tournament in Washington. The fines committee has affirmed that officials followed correct procedures in defaulting the player.
“However, the committee has concluded that loss of rankings points and prize money, which is automatically applied in the case of a default, would be a disproportionate penalty in this case.
“Shapovalov therefore retains quarter-final points and prize money, with a fine of $36,400 (£28,500) applied for the code violation.”
Shapovalov has form when it comes to questionable behaviour on the court and was defaulted during the 2017 Davis Cup after hitting the ball towards the stands and inadvertently striking umpire Arnaud Gabas in the eye.
And after that incident, the 25-year-old later explained: “I let a lot of people down, including my country, Davis Cup team-mates, supporters and fans. I knew I couldn’t undo what happened, so the only thing left was to face my mistake and work on never letting this happen again.
“I stayed in touch with Arnaud to check on his recovery and he has been incredibly gracious and understanding.
“It occurred to me again that the Davis Cup incident was probably the most maturing experience for me since turning pro.”
INDIAN WELLS, Calif. -- Carlos Alcaraz could run into Novak Djokovic in the quarterfinals in his quest for a rare Indian Wells three-peat, while defending women
Four American women sit in the Top 10 in the WTA rankings after Emma Navarro jumped to No. 8 in the world after capturing her first 500 title at the Merida Open
American tennis is back on the up and Rafael Nadal saw a revival coming back in 2022 around the time when Indian Wells was taking place. The BNP Paribas Open w
All-time tennis great Serena Williams purchased a share of the Toronto Tempo, the new WNBA team that's set to take the floor next summer, she and the club annou