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Queen's Final : David Nalbandian disqualified at Queen's for injuring a line judge, Nalbandian Cilic
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Queen's Final : David Nalbandian disqualified at Queen's for injuring a line judge, Nalbandian Cilic
  • Published_at:2012-06-18
  • Category:Sports
  • Channel:Wazabetcom
  • tags: AEGON, Championships, tennis, Queen's, Final, 2012, David, Nalbandian, disqualified, at, for, injuring, line, judge, 17-06-12, crazy, injures, official, Kick, Blood, Shin, Queens, Club, Marin, Cilic, angry, mens, singles, men, bleeding, injured, injury, june, 17, london, wimbledon, live, bbc
  • description: Join us on Facebook : http://www.facebook.com/pages/Wazabet/170098503068226 Bet for Free and Win your favorite football team's shirt on http://www.wazabet.com --- Argentina's David Nalbandian was sensationally disqualified from the Queen's Club final on Sunday for angrily kicking an advertising board at a line judge which left the official suffering a gashed and bloodied leg. The fiery Nalbandian, who had won the first set 7-6 (7/3) against Croatia's Marin Cilic, had just lost his serve to fall 4-3 down in the second when he reacted with a frustrated kick at the board, which was just in front of line judge Andrew McDougall. A stunned and angry McDougall then rolled up his trousers to reveal a bloody gash on his leg before appearing to remonstrate with Nalbandian. Play came to a halt and after a delay of several minutes, ATP supervisor Tom Barnes came onto the court to speak to umpire Fergus Murphy and Nalbandian. It soon emerged that the 30-year-old's petulant behaviour had been punished with disqualification "due to unsportsmanike behaviour" and Cilic was declared the champion. Nalbandian responded by waving his arms in frustration while the 6,000-capacity crowd jeered, but the former Wimbledon finalist later returned to the court to apologise for his actions. "I am sorry to do that. Sometimes we get very frustrated here on court. It is tough to control," he said, before also launching into a rant against ATP chiefs. "It is a tough moment to end a final like that. Sometimes we feel the pressure from the ATP. It is a mistake and I have to pay for that. Everybody makes mistakes. "There are a lot of rules and sometimes they don't do anything. The rule book is very big and I can tell you the ATP do a lot to the players and nothing happens." Barnes, who confirmed he made the decision to eject Nalbandian as soon as he saw the line judge was hurt, said the Argentine had accepted the sanction and will be stripped of his runners-up cheque, worth 44,945 euros ($56,802), and 150 ATP ranking points, which he would have earned as a beaten finalist. He could also be hit with a 10,000 euro ($12,638) fine, which will be decided by ATP chiefs at a later date. "He knows the rules and knew what was going to happen. He didn't do it intentionally. He lost control and a guy got hurt," said Barnes. "I am not surprised by what he said about the ATP." Nalbandian was understood to be unhappy with playing conditions at the Queen's Club, a traditional warm-up event for Wimbledon, where the schedule had been badly affected by rain all week. "The grass had been slippery. Maybe he thought it wasn't safe. But the courts were playable," added Barnes. Tournament director Chris Kermode told the BBC: "It's one of those really unfortunate things. "It was an unbelievable final. Best match all week. Nalbandian ran across in frustration and kicked a panel which went flying across and caught a line judge. He's quite seriously injured. A violation was called immediately. "Nalbandian clearly regrets what he's done. It's unfortunate. These things happen. "To have the match ending this way is disappointing, but we're under the governance of ATP rules. David feels terrible. It was a pure accident." Cilic looked slightly bewildered as he lifted the giant silver trophy during a rather subdued post-match presentation on court. It was the 23-year-old's first ATP title since winning in St Petersburg in October last year and the triumph made him the first Croatian man to win on grass since Goran Ivanisevic at Wimbledon in 2001. But the sixth seed admitted taking the title in such a bizarre manner wasn't the ideal way to conclude a successful week. "It was very bitter. It's definitely not the way I wanted to win," Cilic said. "To end like this is not easy. The match was getting hot and it's tough to see the final finishe like this. "I can't change it, but I'm really sorry for the fans that it finished like this."
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2012-06-21 12,753 4 6 (France,#35)