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Tennis-Vallejo fined for sexist remarks about female referee at French Open

By Thomson Reuters May 29, 2026 | 12:02 PM

PARIS, May 29 (Reuters) – Paraguayan player Adolfo Daniel Vallejo will be fined after he suggested women lack the courage to umpire rowdy crowds following his marathon five-hour defeat by a French teenager, the ​French Tennis Federation (FFT) said on Friday.

Vallejo blamed Brazilian referee Ana ‌Carvalho for failing to control the home crowd during his second-round loss to France’s Moise Kouame, who triumphed 6-3 7-5 3-6 2-6 7-6 (10-8) at a packed Court Suzanne Lenglen.

“I think this sort of matches should be umpired by a man,” Vallejo told Clay magazine.

“It’s ‌very ​difficult for a woman to do it because ⁠the crowd is very annoying. ⁠You need to have a lot of courage to go against the crowd.”

The 17-year-old Kouame was roared on by passionate home supporters during the thriller that lasted four hours and 56 minutes, but Vallejo insisted ​the atmosphere only helped his opponent.

“I knew it was going to be like that. It didn’t harm me, it only strengthened him,” he said, ⁠adding that a male umpire would have “absolutely” made ⁠a difference against the “disrespectful” crowd.

The FFT swiftly condemned the ​comments as “unacceptable” and announced the fine.

“The competence of an umpire is not determined ​by their gender, but by their professionalism and ability to officiate ‌at the highest level,” the FFT said in a statement.

“The outcome of a sporting event, whether positive or negative, can never justify or excuse such remarks. The tournament organisers will impose a significant sanction on Adolfo Vallejo in ⁠the form of a fine.

“The Roland Garros tournament strongly condemns all sexist remarks, regardless of who makes them, and offers its support to the match umpire and, ⁠more broadly, to all ‌the tournament’s umpiring officials.”

Vallejo attempted damage control on social ⁠media, claiming his comments were taken out of context.

“I ​never ‌spoke about women in general, I was referring specifically ​to the ⁠referee, who failed to manage the crowd at any point during the match,” he posted on X.

“That said, I didn’t say I lost because of her either. I congratulated the opponent and it’s only natural for the crowd to support the home player.”

(Reporting by Rohith Nair in Bengaluru and Shrivathsa Sridhar in Paris;Editing ​by Christian Radnedge)