Australian tennis star Jordan Thompson has had the last laugh after confronting hecklers in the front row of his first match at the Cincinnati Open.
The world No.32 lost the first set against 13th seed Ugo Humbert but when he began mounting a comeback in the second, he was up against more than his opponent.
The drama unfolded on the court and social media as a tennis fan sitting nearby provided running updates on the two men.
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Thompson was “clearly agitated” after the second run-in and notified chair umpire Mohamed Lahyani, but it was then “getting more heated” with a third incident and the Australian spoke directly with the fans.
Lahyani himself spoke with one of the men and security then threatened to throw him out, at which point the fan tracking the saga noted one man had twice “mentioned having a bet on Humbert and argued his case”.
“I can see white shirt man’s phone. Looks to be placing bets,” the fan wrote.
Later, he said: “Thompson missed a first serve on break point and had two choice curse words. When he loses the break the man got up for it and told Thompson there are children here. Probably irrelevant but I see no children.”
One of the man then said — “totally unprovoked,” according to the chronicler — “I want to see Nick Kyrgios, not Jordan Thompson!”
“Still he has not been removed from the stadium,” the fan wrote.
“Many fans seated near me are frustrated that this man has not been thrown out.”
By this point Thompson had the support of the crowd and rode the wave towards a stunning 3-6 6-3 7-6 (7-4) victory over Humbert.
“White shirt gambler made a quick and quiet exit,” the fan wrote.
“Fans discussed how happy they were that he lost hundreds of dollars.”
Thompson also received the backing of Canadian tennis star Denis Shapovalov afterwards.
“So ATP Tour, how long are we going to keep allowing these things to go on?” Shapovalov wrote.
Numerous tennis stars have spoken out on receiving social media abuse from punters over the years.
Indeed, Thompson has not shared any photos to Instagram since winning a doubles title in May but that post is flooded with recent comments from unhappy bettors.
Such confrontations rarely unfold at stadiums.
Notably, however, sports betting has taken on a prominent role in American sport coverage since being legalised in more American states in recent years.
American tennis journalist Ben Rothenberg described what Thompson faced as “an increasingly common scene” at US tennis tournaments.
“Fans sitting courtside and heckling players because they have bet money on the opponent,” he wrote.
“As sports gambling gets legalised state by state this will only intensify.”
Thompson will face world No.20 Sebastian Baez in the second round in Cincinnati, with the winner progressing to a likely clash with world No.1 Jannik Sinner.
The Australian is on the brink of being seeded for the US Open beginning on August 26.
World No.10 Alex de Minaur will be the top Aussie, joined by Alexei Popyrin after his unexpected triumph at the Montreal Masters catapulted him into 23rd in the rankings.