Man denies saying racial slurs to Serena
'I'm at my wit's end about this,' Winton, 51, says of incident at tournament
![]() | Serena Williams claims a heckler used racial slurs against her on Monday at the Sony Ericcsson Open. |
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David Winton admits heckling Serena Williams but denies he used racial slurs before being ejected from the Sony Ericcson Open in Key Biscayne, Fla., the Miami Herald reported Wednesday.
''I said she was lazy, that she didn't run for balls -- stuff like that -- but I did not say the N-word or use any racial language,'' Donald Winton told the Herald on Tuesday. "I'm at my wit's end about this. I didn't say a word the whole first set; … in the second set I said some stuff and I guess she didn't like it, but I didn't say what she said I said."
Williams said Monday that the heckler bothered her throughout her match and made at least one racist remark before he was ejected.
“The guy said, ‘Hit the net like any Negro would.’ I was shocked,” Williams said. “I couldn’t believe it. I had to do a double take. I think I hit a double fault on that point.”
"They told me I said derogatory remarks and made her feel uncomfortable, and that's why I had to leave," said Winton, who was issued a no-trespass warning from Miami-Dade police.
Williams won the third-round match against Lucie Safarova, 6-3, 6-4. Williams complained late in the match to the chair umpire about the heckler.
“I shouldn’t have let it bother me, because growing up in Compton we had drive-bys,” said Williams, who was raised in Los Angeles. “I guess that’s what my dad prepared me for, but I’m not going to stand for it.”
Fans and security confirmed a man heckled Williams inappropriately, tournament director Adam Barrett said.
“The man was identified and escorted off the site,” Barrett said. “As security determines the severity of his actions, he may not be welcome to return. We take these matters very, very seriously.”
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With a small crowd in the stadium for her late-afternoon match, she said she could hear the heckler between points and during them.
“Every time I missed a shot or a serve, he would say, ‘That’s the way to do it,”’ she said. “He was calling, ‘Foot fault.’ He was saying, ‘Hit in the net.’ ... I mean, who does this? That’s so elementary. You don’t do this on a professional level.”
Williams and her sister Venus have boycotted the Indian Wells tournament since 2001, when the family was booed after Venus withdrew just before a semifinal match against Serena. Their father, Richard, said those jeers were racially motivated.
“It’s always something with me,” Serena said with a laugh.
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