Blasts from the past: Umpire walks out of Bob Hewitt match

Bob Hewitt.
CALLED OUT Bob Hewitt.
Image: File/Archive

Today in SA sports history: February 5

1965 — A Pretoria umpire walks off court mid-match to protest the constant complaints by one of the players during a semifinal. American Donald Dell was playing against Australian-turned-South African Bob Hewitt – and it wasn’t the normally fiery tempered Hewitt doing the moaning. Dell had repeatedly complained about line calls and then complained further when the line judges walked off the court. That’s when umpire Ian Cunningham decided he’d had enough too. “Well, it’s all yours, boys,” he said as he threw down the score sheet, put on his coat and walked into the stands. An office-bearer from the SA Lawn Tennis Union took over as umpire. Dell surprised Hewitt to win 7-9, 6-4, 7-5, 6-3. In 2015 – half a century later – Hewitt would be convicted of rape and sexual assault against girls he coached in the 1980s and 1990s.

1983 — Brian Baronet, one of the tragic characters of SA boxing, beats journeyman Bramley Whiteboy on an eighth-round technical knockout at the Ellis Park tennis stadium to stretch his unbeaten record to 17. But he would suffer his first defeat in his very next fight, against Lorenzo Luis Garcia of Argentina in Durban the following month. Baronet died after being knocked out by American Kenny Vice in 1988.

1999 — The SA one-day cricket team defeats the West Indies by a massive 114 runs in Bloemfontein in the sixth contest of their series. Captain Hansie Cronje top-scored with 82 runs from 79 balls. Shaun Pollock took three wickets while Victor Mpitsang, Jacques Kallis and Lance Klusener took two apiece. At the time that was SA’s biggest winning margin in terms of runs over the West Indies and it put the hosts 5-1 ahead in the series.

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