Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

Wimbledon removes ‘Miss’ and ‘Mrs’ from the game

Tennis - Wimbledon - All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, London, Britain - July 3, 2019  Britain's Heather Watson in action during her second round match against Estonia's Anett Kontaveit  REUTERS/Carl Recine - RC1D7D4A90A0

Umpires at Wimbledon have stopped using prefixes such as 'Miss' and 'Mrs' at the end of each game. Image: REUTERS/Carl Recine

Toby Davis

A familiar sound was absent from Wimbledon's courts when the tournament started on Monday as umpires were no longer using a woman's marital status at the end of each game and match.

The use of prefixes such as 'Miss' and 'Mrs' has, for the most part, been scrapped by the organisers, ending a long-held tradition and bringing parity with the men's game.

That means no more "Game, Miss ... " or "Game, set and match, Mrs..."

Britain's Heather Watson was among those to welcome the move, saying: "Equality is always good."

Yet, as with the passing of all traditions, not everybody was completely won over.

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Men's world number one Novak Djokovic said he supported the move, but added: "I thought that tradition was very unique and very special. I thought it was nice.

"It's definitely not easy to alter or change any traditions here that have been present for many years. It's quite surprising that they've done that."

Prefixes will not disappear entirely -- they will still be used for code violations, medical announcements and player challenges, but this is the same for women and men.

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