Three weeks of World TeamTennis at the Greenbrier resort in West Virginia had come down to a single point on Sunday.
In the last match of the final, the New York Empire and the Chicago Smash had a simultaneous championship point at 6-6 in the decisive women’s doubles tiebreaker.
Sloane Stephens of the Smash hit her first serve in play. Coco Vandeweghe of the Empire took a bold forehand cut and her return flew well out of Stephens’s reach, landing deep near the baseline.
There was no call by a line judge, because there were no line judges on the court.
Instead, the critical call was made electronically, and though Stephens and the Smash asked to see a replay of the virtual ball mark, it only confirmed the judgment of the machine.
The replay showed Vandeweghe’s shot had landed on the back half of the baseline. The Empire had a 21-20 victory and the celebration — no model of social distancing with group hugs galore — could begin in earnest.
World TeamTennis was using Hawk-Eye Live, an automated system that not only eliminates line judges but also eliminates the now-familiar challenge setup in which players can ask for human calls to be reviewed by an electronic system.
With Hawk-Eye Live, the electronic system makes all the calls, even if there are some familiar touches like the recorded voices that shout “out,” “fault” or “foot fault.”
When a line call is particularly close, the system automatically uses a recorded voice that projects more urgency. As in GPS systems, different voices (and languages) can be used and during World TeamTennis, both male voices and female voices were used during matches.
“For us, actually having a human voice still call ‘out’ rather than using a beep or some other sound was an important part of making sure the feel of the sport didn’t change,” said James Japhet, the managing director of Hawk-Eye North America.
But there is no doubt that Hawk-Eye Live represents major change and later this month it is set to make its Grand Slam tournament debut. The United States Tennis Association plans to deploy it on all but its two biggest show courts at the United States Open, scheduled for Aug. 31-Sept. 13. The U.S. Open was the first Grand Slam event to use electronic line calling for its challenge system in 2006. In 2018, it became the first Grand Slam event to make that available on all its courts. Now comes the next phase as Hawk-Eye goes from serving as quality control and a broadcast tool to being the first and final word.
The system also will be used at the Western & Southern Open, the combined WTA and ATP event transplanted from the Cincinnati suburbs that is scheduled for the week before the U.S. Open at the U.S.T.A. Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Queens.
“I’m happy to see the U.S. Open using Hawk-Eye Live,” said Carlos Silva, chief executive of World TeamTennis. “Is the system perfect? Probably not. Is it close to perfect? Yes. Is it more perfect than humans? 100 percent yes.”
It also has the potential to put quite a few human line judges out of work, which is partly why the sport as a whole has been slow to adopt Hawk-Eye Live. There is also concern that it could make it more difficult to develop quality chair umpires because line judging is the typical pathway to the chair.
“I imagine I’m off a few Christmas card lists,” Japhet said. “We’re not in the business of trying to remove people from the sport. It just happens to have been a byproduct of this particular advancement of the technology. So I think there certainly have been questions asked on our side and the sport’s side as to whether this is the right thing to do.”
World TeamTennis chose to forgo line judges and use Hawk-Eye Live for the last three years. The men’s tour has done the same since 2017 at its Next Gen ATP Finals, an experimental event for the best players under the age of 22. But what is driving the U.S. Open’s decision above all is the coronavirus pandemic and the need to maintain safety and social distancing.
“Every functional area of the tournament has been asked to limit the number of people who physically need to be on-site,” said Stacey Allaster, the U.S. Open tournament director.
That includes officials, and by using Hawk-Eye Live on 15 of the 17 match courts, the U.S. Open can drastically reduce the number of line judges on site: from approximately 350 to well under 100. Only Arthur Ashe Stadium and Louis Armstrong Stadium will still feature full, officiating crews of nine line judges who work rotating one-hour shifts. The other courts will have only a chair umpire, who will call the score after Hawk-Eye Live makes the call and who will focus more on monitoring player behavior and the pace of play. The umpires will not be allowed to overrule the machines on line calls, only taking over if the system breaks down during a point and fails to make a call. If the audio system were to fail, a light attached to the umpire’s chair would still indicate when Hawk-Eye has determined a shot is out.
The system is not entirely glitch-free. During this World TeamTennis season, Jessica Pegula of the Orlando Storm and Bernarda Pera of the Washington Kastles were playing a tiebreaker in a women’s singles match. With Pera leading 2-1, she hit a ball that was not called out but that Pegula and her teammates were convinced had landed wide.
They asked to see a replay, and it suspiciously said the ball had landed well within the court.
“We were like, this obviously isn’t right,” Pegula said. “Hawk-Eye clearly messed up. If you saw the ball land, that’s not where the mark was at all. We switched sides and were arguing with them and the umpire got a call from whoever works the Hawk-Eye and said, ‘Actually you are correct, Hawk-Eye was wrong. The ball was out.’”
She continued: “If we wouldn’t have fought about it, it probably wouldn’t have happened because the umpire just goes with what Hawk-Eye says. So there have been some discrepancies here.”
Japhet said Hawk-Eye officials monitoring the system also have access to a broadcast feed as an additional tool for such rare occasions. But he said the automated system had been tested and shown to be accurate within two millimeters.
Donald Young, a veteran American who first played in World TeamTennis in 2016, remains a convert.
“Obviously with the Covid situation, it’s particularly useful, but apart from that, it’s just great,” he said. “The ball is coming fast, so you can see it sometimes faster with Hawk-Eye than with a lot of eyes. Sometimes it can be a little off. A couple calls have been inside the box, and the guys had to correct it, but it’s definitely gotten a lot better over the years for sure. I think it’s more accurate now than ever.”
The ATP Tour, which until now had only authorized the use of Hawk-Eye Live at the Next-Gen Finals, has temporarily approved the system’s use at all ATP events because of the pandemic. The women’s tour has for now only approved its use at the Western & Southern Open, which will be the first WTA event to use the system.
Japhet said he expects a significant increase in Hawk-Eye Live use over the next two years in part because of the pandemic and the system’s precision but also because of economics. Though operating the system is expensive with its 18 cameras, six of them used by a review official to monitor foot faults, it is also costly to house, feed, transport and pay daily wages to hundreds of line judges.
“I think the numbers do stack up for tournaments,” Japhet said. “They have a net savings in using it.”
Technology is ever more pervasive in professional sports. But Pegula, a 26-year-old American, hopes line judges do not go the way of net-cord judges, who were gradually replaced by sensors mounted on the net in the 1990s.
“It’s a fun part of our sport, and obviously adding the challenges in to kind of question them makes it exciting and more entertaining for fans,” she said. “I don’t know if I would want to eliminate linesmen forever. It’s part of tennis, part of its culture. It’s more interactive that way.”
But Silva believes more technology and less human error are inevitable.
“I think that ship sailed a long time ago in the world we live in,” he said. “We’re all living on iPods and iPhones and asking Google to be our memories. I think it’s long overdue to have the lines get called automatically, and I think there are a bunch of new technologies around, not just the cameras and sensors doing it now. You might even see active paint and things like that for the lines, which might make it even more accurate than what we have now.”
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