American Frances Tiafoe stated tennis ought to loosen its strict guidelines governing the behaviour of followers attending matches to assist entice a youthful viewers.
According to tennis etiquette, followers shouldn’t make any noise throughout factors and may solely transfer to and from their seats when gamers take a break throughout the change of ends.
“I think fans should be able to come and go and move around and speak during matches,” Tiafoe advised Forbes.
“Imagine going to a basketball game and not saying anything.”
Tiafoe advised the journal that sure occasions like Wimbledon ought to retain some custom however “outside that, let’s start to change things to bring younger fans to the game.”
At final yr’s U.S. Open, Tiafoe electrified the New York crowd throughout his win over Rafa Nadal within the final 16 en path to reaching his first Grand Slam semi-final.
There he additional endeared himself to the followers when he battled eventual champion Carlos Alcaraz for 5 units in entrance of a sold-out crowd that included former First Lady Michelle Obama.
It isn’t any shock then that the 25-year-old from Maryland stated the comparatively rowdy environment at Arthur Ashe Stadium in Flushing Meadows makes it his favourite courtroom to play on.
“There’s nothing like Arthur Ashe at night,” stated Tiafoe, who can be in motion on Friday within the Miami Open.
“Arthur Ashe period, but Arthur Ashe at night. New York at night, everyone’s drunk and the atmosphere, it’s crazy.”
Fellow American and world quantity three Jessica Pegula stated she favored Tiafoe’s “positive” concepts however there needed to be checks to make sure gamers should not disturbed.
“You can’t have people shouting in the middle of a point necessarily, but maybe if the movement was less restrictive, I don’t think it’s that big of a deal,” Pegula stated.
“But then, you open yourself up to things that could happen where it does maybe cause hindrances throughout the play and it really affects the players.
“He loves the NBA and goes to games. It’s like constant chatter between the players and the people sitting on the court. There’s a lot of movement, music.
“I think we have to implement some of those things. We have to fit it to our sport, but the idea is there. Maybe just fine-tuning it.”
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com