NEW YORK (AP) — Alexander Zverev felt he had to react when he heard a fan use
language from Adolf Hitler's Nazi regime during his
U.S. Open match.
This wasn't the type of heckling that players are prepared to face and trained to ignore. It highlighted a challenge faced by players and the U.S. Open itself as the event draws the biggest crowds in its history: making sure fans are engaged but not disrupting the tennis — and how to respond when they do.
In the case of Zverev's match, the spectator was sitting in a crowded section close to the court, where many more people besides the 2020 runner-up could hear the offensive words. So Zverev complained to the chair umpire and the man was ejected.
"At the end of the day I said what I said, the umpire immediately said, ‘OK, we're going to get him out,' and that's it," Zverev said.
Another fan was thrown out Tuesday when he screamed at a key moment during Novak Djokovic's quarterfinal victory over Taylor Fritz, distracting the 23-time Grand Slam champion enough to cost him that point and then having screams directed back at him when Djokovic lost the next point, too.