The young man knows the rules, but the old man knows the exceptions. | | Naomi Osaka won the Women's Singles finals of the 2018 US Open against Serena Williams. It was not without drama. (Chris Trotman/Getty Images) | | | | | "The young man knows the rules, but the old man knows the exceptions." - | Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. | | | | | | rantnrave:// No coaching during a tennis match is as dumb as no OSCAR for movies not released in theaters. But a U.S. OPEN chair umpire, CARLOS RAMOS, penalized SERENA WILLIAMS during the final for it. She denied it. And it worked her up. Her coach didn't. This code violation warning for coaching and a further code violation for smashing her racket brings about a point penalty. Soon after, she says, "For you to attack my character is wrong. You owe me an apology. You will never be on a court with me as long as you live. You are the liar. You owe me an apology. Say it. Say you're sorry. How dare you insinuate that I was cheating? You stole a point from me. You're a thief too." That resulted in a game penalty. She said, "I don't cheat to win. I'd rather lose." in 2015, NOVAK DJOKOVIC communicated with his coach, BORIS BECKER, but denied it was cheating. Again, this happened during the Serena's final! A match that is a 1 in million shot for any human. And the final call, I guess, was discretionary. Serena let it get to her. But the call was petty. Here is a great timeline. And it's not lost on many of us that we see a white guy in a suit that would look at home at a CROQUET tournament replete with watercress sandwiches sitting 5 ft. above a black, female athlete judging her and penalizing her in her job. I'm not saying class is involved. I'm not saying race is involved. I'm not saying gender is involved (Serena does). But we live in radically changing times. And I'm pretty sure, in fact, I'm saying that the Open officials have no clue about the irony. And how many times have we seen a man scream up to that chair and way less happens? And again, this is the final. Look at the NFL or NBA. In matches like this, they pull punches because of the importance of the event. And this wasn't egregious on Serena's part. This sport's governing body and rules need to take a time machine into the present. Shed its seemingly rich, elitist history. My friend BRIAN KOPPELMAN summarizes it perfectly. And there is more upsetting. NAOMI OSAKA, Serena's opponent outplayed her. And at 20 years old, she won her first grand slam and had to listen to boos from the crowd. This is a moment to be cherished. By the winner and the crowd. Some say that Serena is a sore loser. Some say the chair umpire ruined a match with a petty and discretionary call. It was all awkward and unfortunate. And the trophy ceremony was too at first. And given that should be Naomi's moment, it was upsetting. Until Serena tried to recover the mood, "I don't want to do questions. She played well, this is her first grand slam. I know you guys were rooting but let's make this a great moment. Let's not boo. Let's be positive. Congratulations Naomi. No more booing. Thank you to my team, you guys are amazing. Thank you to the crowd, you guys really are the best in the world. I really hope to play here again. It's been tough here for me but thank you so much." But Naomi, the champion, won the match and the day with her comments, "I know that everyone was cheering for her, and I'm sorry it had to end like this. I just want to say thanks for watching the match... My mum has sacrificed a lot for me, and it means a lot for her to come and watch my matches. She doesn't usually come to them. All that we're missing is my dad but he physically doesn't watch my matches. He just walks around... It was also my dream to play Serena in the US Open final, and I'm really glad I was able to do that. I'm grateful I was able to play with you. Thank you." That's grace and class. And then the crowd turned and gave her what was due. Watch here... Happy Birthday MICHAEL LANG, JOSHUA SCHACHTER, KEN HERTZ, CLARE REICHENBACH, JOSHUA AUERBACH, and DAVID GERSTENHABER | | | - Jason Hirschhorn, curator | | | | | The Guardian | The true story of how the City of London invented offshore banking - and set the rich free | | | | The Baffler | The relationship between Facebook and news publishers is a bizarre charade, peopled by unreliable characters, dotted with contradictions, suffused with dependency and resentment. | | | | Slate | The article's style and content points to one person in particular. | | | | CNET | At Facebook, where men outnumber women almost two to one, the future of news is female. | | | | South China Morning Post | Artificial intelligence system developed in Beijing 'will never replace doctors' but it can trace brain activity invisible to the human eye | | | | Gamasutra | Artificial Intelligence has absorbed nearly all aspects of the modern life. Every day we benefit from its advantages in modern technology and various complex instruments. Therefore, it is quite interesting what angle AI might be playing in gambling. Let us find out the answer to this question together. | | | | ZDNet | We spend a lot of time on personalization of the customer's experience, but as the customer demands more control over their choices and greater levels of interaction and better experience with the company, humanization comes to the fore. What's the difference between personalization and humanization and why are both necessary? Paul Greenberg responds. | | | | BuzzFeed News | BET's "The Bobby Brown Story" and Aretha Franklin's televised eulogy show how men often rewrite the personal narratives of the women celebrities they claim to love. | | | | The New York Times | He may be a wandering plague ship of a man, but journalists should talk to him. | | | | Skift | "Nothing is off limits" when boutique hotel pioneer Ian Schrager takes the stage at Skift Global Forum in New York City on Sept. 27, where he will be "Nothing is off limits" when boutique hotel pioneer Ian Schrager takes the stage at Skift Global Forum in New York City on Sept. 27. | | | | CNN | Have you ever pressed the pedestrian button at a crosswalk and wondered if it really worked? Or bashed the "close door" button in an elevator, while suspecting that it may, in fact, have no effect whatsoever? You're not alone, and you may be right. The world is full of buttons that don't actually do anything. | | | | recode | Subtack CEO Chris Best makes the case for electronic mail on the latest episode of Recode Media. | | | | The Ringer | A new generation of rising young women rock stars-including Mitski, Snail Mail, and Camp Cope-has emerged. And they're redefining what it means to own the room. | | | | Daily Mail Online | Avowed socialist Julia Salazar grew up in a succession of sprawling waterfront homes enjoying all the trappings of middle-class life, from boats and luxury cars to pedigree pets and private school, DailyMail.com can reveal. | | | | GamesIndustry | IOC president Thomas Bach dismissed games as "contradictory to Olympic values" - but his approval is less important than what esports is building elsewhere | | | | UX Collective | Every month, over half a million people in the US make suicide-related searches on Google. The automated response that is supposed to stop them and save lives feels lifeless. | | | | Foreign Policy | America's newest live-streaming reality show features the foreign-policy establishment fighting for its life against Donald Trump. | | | | Lefsetz Letter | You can't read the story unless you're a subscriber. The best article I read on the plane out here was about Fashion Nova clothing, a brand built on Instagram. Cheap clothing with tons of varieties sold by models both known and unknown, You want to be a Nova girl. | | | | Longreads | Secrecy and speechifying, collegiality and hierarchy, exceptionalism and opulence on the Supreme Court. | | | | The New Yorker | David Meggyesy, who played as a linebacker for the St. Louis Cardinals in the sixties, was accused of disrespecting the national anthem in a sport with a culture that has long celebrated authoritarian deference. | | | | McKinsey & Company | Organizational culture can accelerate the application of analytics, amplify its power, and steer companies away from risky outcomes. Here are seven principles that underpin a healthy data culture. | | | | | | YouTube | | | | | | | | | | | | | © Copyright 2018, The REDEF Group | | |
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