US Open adding video review for double bounces

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New US Open tournament referee Jake Garner recalls being a chair umpire and having a tough time figuring out in the moment whether a ball had bounced twice before a player got it back over the net.

If that happens at Flushing Meadows this year, though, an official can check a replay: Video review will make its Grand Slam tennis debut when main-draw competition begins in New York on Aug. 28.

“There were certain situations, of course, where you would see a video postmatch and wish you had made a different decision,” Garner told The Associated Press, “or wish you had assistance in making that decision.”

Video review — which is separate from the electronic line-calling used for ruling balls in or out at all matches — will be set up for five of the Open’s 17 competition courts: Arthur Ashe Stadium, Louis Armstrong Stadium, Grandstand, Court 5 and Court 17. That sampling, which should include a little more than 50% of singles matches, according to Garner, will be studied before deciding whether to expand the system in 2024.

This year, players in singles, doubles and mixed doubles will get three challenges per set for things such as double bounces, a ball touching a player’s body, a player touching the net or a player being hindered by noise. They’ll hold on to a challenge if they’re correct and will receive an additional one in tiebreakers.

“I had pushed for this for a while, so I am glad to see the US Open is going to allow it,” said Jessica Pegula, an American who is ranked No. 3 and was involved in a high-profile missed call on a double bounce that helped her opponent, Iga Swiatek, at last year’s French Open. “It will be great for both the players and the fans.”

It’s the latest example of modern assistance for officials in sports — and the latest example of the US Open leading the way when it comes to recent rules changes at major tennis tournaments.

“We’re always looking to innovate,” Garner said.

The US Open was the first Slam event with electronic line-calling (in 2006), the first with a serve clock (2018) and the first to allow in-match communication with coaches (2022).

Video review has been tested at lower-profile men’s events such as the ATP Cup and the Next Gen Finals. It has not been tried at a women’s tournament.

“It’s a good step in the right direction,” Chris Eubanks, an American ranked No. 29, said about video review. “If the technology’s there, why not use it?”

One additional element Garner said was adopted in 2021 but formally written into the rules only this year: If a player does something that could result in a default — such as when Novak Djokovic inadvertently hit a line judge with a ball at the 2020 US Open — video can help determine whether disqualification is warranted.

Several players asked about the new video review setup were not aware of it.

They were uniformly in favor.

“It completely makes sense,” said Caroline Garcia, a 2022 US Open semifinalist from France. “It can be super frustrating if you think you saw a double bounce and the umpire didn’t see it, for some reason. It’s always better to know right away than to be mad at someone. You just want to know.”

When there is a challenge, two people away from the court will send the best replay to the chair umpire’s screen and to videoboards in the arena. The umpire will have three options: confirm the original call, overturn it, or let the call stand if there isn’t clear video evidence one way or the other.

All reviews will be prompted by players, and having them available should help reduce — if not eliminate — disagreements over these types of episodes, which happen every so often.

“If you think something didn’t go your way, just challenge it. Then there’s no more arguing,” said Jordan Thompson, an Australian ranked No. 55.

He lost a point in the last game of a match at a US Open tuneup in Washington, D.C., two years ago even though his opponent connected with the ball after an extra bounce. The two players got in each other’s faces afterward, and the chair umpire climbed down to separate them.

At the 2009 French Open, for example, Serena Williams hit a shot that went off her opponent’s arm but wasn’t called that way. This year in Paris, Holger Rune won a point he shouldn’t have because of a double bounce.

“Some umpires, they make mistakes. Some for me; some for him,” Rune said. “That’s life.”

Such errors should be more avoidable now.

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