Monday, September 10, 2018

Serena Williams fined $17k for three code violations during her confrontation with the umpire at the US Open Final

Serena Williams fined $17k for three code violations during her confrontation with the umpire at the US Open Final





Serena Williams?fined $17k for three code violations during her confrontation with the umpire at the US Open Final
Serena Williams has been fined a total of $17,000 for her three code violations during the US Open final against Naomi Osaka.

The six-time US Open winner was docked $10,000 for “verbal abuse” of chair umpire Carlos Ramos by the tournament referee’s office on Sunday. Additionally, she has been fined $4,000 for being warned for coaching and $3,000 for breaking her racket. The money comes out of her prize money of $1.85 million as the runner-up. Williams lost 6-2, 6-4 to Osaka in Saturday’s final.

Under Article III, Section P, “verbal abuse” is defined as “a statement about an official, opponent, sponsor, spectator or other person that implies dishonesty or is derogatory, insulting or otherwise abusive.”

The section says a player is subject to a fine up to $20,000 for each violation. There are separate categories for coaching (“Communications of any kind, audible or visible, between a player and a coach may be construed as coaching”) and for abuse of rackets or equipment.

In the controversial final, Serena was adjudged to have recieved coaching from Patrick Mouratoglou; a claim he accepted before being penalised a point later for racket abuse. She was then docked a game for verbal abuse after seven games in the second set. During the verbal tirade, Serena had called Ramos a ‘cheat’ and a ‘thief

Depression: 'I can't escape this pain' - American rapper, Wale breaks down again

Depression: 'I can't escape this pain' - American rapper, Wale breaks down again





Depression:
Nigerian born American rapper, Wale who once spoke about how he battled drugs and depression back in 2015 has once again broken down on Instagram.

Back then in an interview with Billboard, he sad, 'I was depressed not being where I wanna be in my career when I've put the work in. I wasn't sleeping. I was drinking all day and I didn't have anyone to go to. I couldn't fight it. Those are some of the demons I talk about on the album'.

In his new Intstagram post, Wale wrote, 'I can't escape this pain. Sometimes there'sabsolutelt no one to go to no matter how much they love you. You have no one. No one is more alone than a person who is the focal point'.

He went on to say, 'some strong friends have no strong friends'.

See his post on Twitter and Instagram below...

Depression:
Depression:

John Legend becomes the first black man and youngest person to win an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and a Tony Award

John Legend becomes the first black man and youngest person to win an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and a Tony Award



John Legend becomes the first black man and youngest person to win?an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and a Tony Award?
After accepting an Emmy Sunday night for his role as a producer on the live musical Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert, which won the Outstanding Variety Special (Live) award, John Legend became the first black man to collect an EGOT.

An EGOT winner is someone who has bagged an Emmy, a Grammy, Oscar and Tony award. The first black entertainer to win an EGOT was Whoopi Goldberg, an honor she secured in 2002.

With this, John Legend becomes the 15th entertainer in history to collect all four statues and the youngest too, at the age of 39. The singer, composer and producer won his first Grammy in 2005, including Best New Artist. Meaning it took him just 13 years to win an Oscar, a Tony and an Emmy, each of which are considered lifetime achievements in their own right.

His wife Chrissy Teigen, celebrated his win with a photo of him alongside two other new EGOT winners and co-producers for Jesus Christ Superstar Andrew Lloyd Weber and Tim Rice.