Win or lose, Victoria Azarenka knew there can be no handshake provided by Ukrainian rival Elina Svitolina on the finish of Sunday’s Wimbledon contest that had been billed because the ‘battle of the mums’.
What the Belarusian didn’t count on was to be booed off court docket after she had performed her half in entertaining the Court One crowd for shut to 3 hours in an exhilarating contest that wanted a third-set match tiebreak to determine the winner.
A puzzled Azarenka was left bemused and shaking her head as she struggled to grasp why the group had abruptly turned hostile on her.
After stopping in her tracks to face the jeering followers, she banged each fists collectively above her head and departed the sector with the boos nonetheless ringing round her ears.
Calling the response “unfair”, Azarenka didn’t need to make a giant deal of it, realising that maybe the group weren’t conscious as to why she didn’t supply to shake palms with Svitolina on the finish of the fourth spherical match.
Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, with Moscow utilizing Belarus as a staging floor for what it calls a “special military operation”, Svitolina has caught to her stance of not shaking palms with gamers from each international locations.
Asked in a press convention if she felt that she was being victimised by the group, Azarenka snapped: “Victim? Victim that somebody didn’t shake my hand? Please. I think we’ve got bigger…
READ: Svitolina comes out on top in blockbuster battle with Azarenka
“I can’t control the crowd. I’m not sure that a lot of people were understanding what’s happening, so… It’s probably been a lot of Pimm’s throughout the day.”
No matter how harshly she felt performed by the group, she refused guilty Svitolina for her predicament.
“I know Elina for a very long time. I’ve always had a good relationship with her. And the circumstances, it is what it is, and that’s it,” stated Azarenka, who turned up for her press convention hiding her eyes behind a pair of darkish sun shades.
“I haven’t done anything wrong, but keep getting different treatment sometimes.
“She doesn’t want to shake hands with Russian, Belarusian people. I respected her decision. What should I have done? Stayed and waited?
“There’s no thing that I could do that would have been right, so I just did what I thought was respectful towards her decision. But this conversation about shaking hands is not a life-changing conversation.”
While it appeared everybody was solely focussing on the occasions that unfolded after Svitolina had sealed her place within the final eight with an ace, Azarenka felt the on-court duel deserved extra plaudits.
“I thought it was a great tennis match. If people are going to be focusing only on handshakes or crowd, quite drunk crowd, booing in the end, that’s a shame,” she stated.
Svitolina thought such conditions might be averted if match organisers issued an announcement to followers to clarify that “there will be no handshake between Russian, Belarusian, and Ukrainian players.”
“Some people do not really know what is happening. So I think this is the right way to do,” the Ukrainian stated.
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com