In a sport that has had a serious gambling scandal involving suspicions of match-fixing, how are we supposed to take Caroline Wozniacki's match the other day?I'm starting to wonder exactly how many tennis matches aren't really on the up-and-up. Wozniacki, who reached the U.S. Open final, led Anne Kremer 7-5, 5-0 Tuesday at the Luxembourg Open.
And that's when Wozniacki chose to retire from the match with an injury. No broken bones. No fall. She had won seven straight games and was four points from winning.
"The injury suddenly happened," she said.
No way.
The WTA tour needs to investigate, and no matter what they were actually up to, Wozniacki and her father need to be punished somehow. That means suspensions or fines.
Wozniacki hurt her hamstring late in the first set and had a trainer wrap it. Up 3-0 in the second set, she called out her father/coach to the court, and he spoke to her in Polish.
A microphone caught the whole thing, and he apparently told her to play two more games and then quit.
"I chose the sporting way,'' Wozniacki said afterward, admitting that she could have played on.
The sporting way? This was about the least sportsmanlike thing imaginable.
Look, here's how this is being explained: Wozniacki's father, Piotr, didn't want her to risk further injury before next week's season-ending tour championships in Doha. So even if she had beaten Kremer, she wasn't going to play the next match.
The idea then, was to allow Kremer to advance to the next round.
"Let them have some joy," Wozniacki's father reportedly said.
The theory was that fans in Luxembourg would have been happy to see Kremer, who is from Luxembourg, advance.
Piotr later told the Danish newspaper Ekstra Bladet that he had told his daughter to play two more games and then decide whether she could be ready for the next round. If not, "Then make the right decision."
That's a little hard to believe. She could have played about another 90 seconds, then had some rest before deciding about the next round.
Image means a lot to tennis, and that's why the sport's governing bodies have been so tough in the crackdown on gambling, or even the appearance of it.
Besides, the 'right decision' would have been to finish the match.
You play a match to the end, or as far as you can. Tennis players consider themselves warriors, standing alone on court with no excuses.
What is the message to Kremer?
It was this: I could have beaten you even though I'm hurt, but I'll let you win.
No one wants to be handed a win like that. It flies right in the face of what tennis is all about.
This is wrong on so many fronts. How about the ticket-buyers, who paid to see a legit match?
And in a sport with gambling issues, you cannot have a coach tell his player to throw a match, no matter what the reason. If she couldn't play at 3-0, then she should have quit then.
If she could have played on, then she should have played on.
I doubt that Wozniacki and her father were involved in match-fixing, but some tough questions need to be asked.
At the least, this is about image. And gamblers reportedly did use the information. Some were said to have placed a bet on Kremer after hearing Wozniacki's dad tell her to retire. The bets were allegedly placed on-line at Betfair, which has not responded to a request for confirmation.
Image means a lot to tennis, and that's why the sport's governing bodies have been so tough in the crackdown on gambling, or even the appearance of it.
Suspicions rose a few years ago with some strange betting during a match with Nikolay Davydenko, who has been cleared of wrong-doing.
Several players since have told of being approached to fix matches. Earlier this year, French player Mathieu Montcourt, now deceased, was suspended five weeks for betting a total of $192 on 36 tennis matches.
That's an awfully big punishment for $5 a match.
It doesn't matter if Wozniacki thought she was doing something nice. The game is on the verge of a credibility gap. Serena Williams doesn't try if she's not playing in a major; she hasn't won a non-major in a year-and-a-half.
And remember last week's cries from the men's tour? Players complained that the tour schedule and demands were too much, and then nine players retired during matches, citing injuries.

This week, Robin Soderling, Feliciano Lopez and Tommy Haas all have won at the Stockholm Open.
All three were among the nine too hurt to finish matches just a few days earlier.
I'm wondering if some of those injuries were real, or if maybe players who didn't really want to be in Saigon for a tournament, anyway, saw Andy Roddick's legitimate injury, and used it as an excuse for dropping out.
For tanking matches.
Come on, tennis. You take a court to win.
You fight to the end. That's what real sportsmen do.
It's what a real warrior would do.
Email me at gregcouch09@aol.com














Reader Comments (Page 1 of 5)
10-21-2009 @ 11:48PM
christophercole3 said...
this guy doesn't get it...i played a tourney and was kickin this guys butt. i got hurt and knew i could beat him but i knew i was done...i shook the guys hand at match point and he went on to lose the next day. the guy got to play and the winner at least got another match in...win/win...so stop baggin on woz...you are clueless just like most writers that don't play.
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10-22-2009 @ 7:11AM
samwise246 said...
I suggest you read the short profile that is posted about Mr. Couch. He did play, he was a nationally ranked amateur and played in some professional tournaments. The man knows tennis.
10-23-2009 @ 8:40PM
SpiceMonkey said...
samwise, just because he plays tennis doesn't mean he gets it... bear witness to the fact that you apparently play tennis, and YOU don't get it. On top of that, if he really did get it, he wouldn't be writing inane crap like this for a living and gambling on tennis matches.
10-23-2009 @ 10:21PM
pittelli said...
The bigger issue to investigate would be the recent unexplained death of Mathieu Montcourt mentioned briefly in this article. Why has there been no investigation of the possibility of performance enhancing drugs like EPO, which have taken the lives of so many professional athletes?
10-23-2009 @ 11:26PM
markme01 said...
I agree with you...this guy is a putz and doesnt have a clue...she was injured...its her career....she works for MONEY....she had to decide where she good to the best.
10-23-2009 @ 11:28PM
tjdwill said...
Right on....... sports writers use to go get the story, now they just phone it in...... and make a buck
10-24-2009 @ 12:16AM
Big Daddy said...
"...so stop baggin on woz...you are clueless just like most writers that don't play."
Exactly!
10-24-2009 @ 12:44AM
mariaslp said...
You don't play at this level, I'm certain.
Caroline is highly trained and could have finished the match.
I predict she is going to fail...
It's called karma
10-24-2009 @ 12:53AM
Hey Feener!!! said...
This guy needs to calm down. Players lose matches all the time on purpose. Especially if its not a big tournament. The players are just getting practice in for the next bigger tournament coming up, and if the player is injured, of course they won't go on to the next round. why risk a career over something small. its also really rude to take the match and not play the next round. it is courtesy to default at match point so the next round will still be played...duh. its just tennis courtesy.
10-24-2009 @ 5:32AM
fullertongymbo said...
Chris, you are absolutely right. I am pretty tired of sports writers who were never athletes trying to talk about "warriors" or saying "no one wants to win like that." SHUT UP! I think she did the right thing and gave someone a chance to grab some fame and feel like a winner. Good for Wozniacki.
Are we really trying to punish someone for being nice? What in the F... is going on here?
10-24-2009 @ 5:34AM
bearmedicin said...
DUDE! It is you that doesnt get it...YOUR A QUITTER. you have been all your life. A lazy quitter. So before you go blaming the writer here; look within your quitting mind, not much to see in there....
10-22-2009 @ 12:54AM
ashleigh said...
I hated it when Justine Henin was losing at the Australian Open & retired on Amelie Mauresmo in the FINAL -- then stayed on court for hours discussing it... She'd claimed it was a stomach bug, as in being nauseated, so if she needed to go throw up, then why did she hang around for so long afterwards? I HATED THAT!
As the the ATP & WTA tour schedule, it IS brutal, and they need to have an "off season"... It and their point system is ABSURD! You have to play & win just to not lose any points, yet you get no additional new points for such an accomplishment, so if you're Roger Federer, it's grueling! He will have to play in EVERY Grand Slam Final next year, AND, win the same ones he won this year, or he will LOSE points! And if he DOES make it to every Grand Slam Final, and if he DOES win the same ones he won this year, he won't get a single new point for having done so... He'll simply not have to LOSE any points...
This point system is punitive, and it's what forces this horrific schedule! Fix the point system, and you fix the schedule. Players will be free to take better care of themselves without risk of losing points!
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10-24-2009 @ 10:50AM
clillemoen said...
I kind of like the system. wishing golf had it, so the top players played more, and supported the tour more.
10-22-2009 @ 10:38AM
mary collins finn said...
I often disagree with Mr. Couch's take on things, but in this instance I agree with every word. The best complexion I can put on things is that it was a bad decision but well meant.
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10-22-2009 @ 5:57PM
ardenwll said...
I have to say that I agree with Couch's perspective from the stand point of being a warrior on the court. But having been an athlete who was invited to the Olympic Festival Games because other athletes chose not to compete. I know what it feels like to have the opportunity to compete in a place that I would not have earned at that time. I actually competed very well when I was given the opportunity.
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10-22-2009 @ 8:17PM
openstance said...
I too usually disagree with most of Mr. Couch's viewpoint and I still find myself disagreeing to an extent. Without a doubt Mr. Couch is completely and 100 percent correct over true sportsmanship--in this instance--and about the ideals us tennis players like to hold on to, but fining a player for doing nothing wrong?? I'm no fan of Wozniacki but that's a little ridiculous. Bad sportsmanship? For sure. Bad timing? Horrible. Bad image? Yupp. But any broken rules? Nope. None that have been proven yet that is. I doubt any will be. And any athlete knows that some of the most painful and debilitating injuries (i.e. twisted ankle) can heal in several days, thus making playing and believe-it-or-not winning matches within a short time frame very much possible. That may or may not be the case, but that's just the facts that support such occurrences.
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10-23-2009 @ 8:07PM
tttfox said...
She did the right thing in retiring before winning the match. It seems she would not have been able to play a competitive match the next day because she was injured, Her opponent that she was beating, however, would be healthy enough to play again and give fans who purchased a ticket an opportunity to see another match.
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10-23-2009 @ 8:08PM
holway5 said...
He's making a mountain out of a molehill. How gets from questionable judgement to outright fix is plain paranoia. Give it up...it must have a slow tennis week.
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10-23-2009 @ 8:21PM
whtetigr2 said...
Wow... how come it seems like this dude is just crying about the match? was he in the match? NO! its none of his business, he probably had bet on the match and lost. oh well.
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10-23-2009 @ 8:35PM
SpiceMonkey said...
lol... that was exactly my impression too, as you can see from my post below... I made that before I even saw yours.