Marin Cilic battles blister and emotions in dramatic Wimbledon final
PIERS Morgan was at his disgraceful worst as he lashed Roger Federer’s opponent during the Wimbledon decider.
AS ROGER Federer charged towards his eighth Wimbledon title, his opponent struggled to keep it together — and Piers Morgan had no sympathy.
In scenes rarely seen before on tennis’s most famous centre court, Marin Cilic broke down in tears and buried his head in his towel after losing the first set and falling behind 3-0 in the second.
The emotional Croat called for a trainer and doctor, and even had the tournament supervisor on hand to ensure he was OK.
Cilic battled on to finish the match, despite a niggling foot blister, but he was a shadow of the player who crushed Federer in straight sets during the 2014 US Open and pushed him to all five sets in last year’s Wimbledon quarterfinals.
Cilic later admitted it was the anguish of not being at his physical best, rather than the pain of the blisters themselves, which caused his emotional breakdown on court.
“It was just a feeling that I knew that I cannot give my best on the court, that I cannot give my best game and my best tennis, especially at this stage of my career, at such a big match,” he said.
“It was very, very difficult to deal with it. That was the only thing.
“But, otherwise, it didn’t hurt so much that it was putting me in tears. It was just that feeling that I wasn’t able to give the best.”
But he found little sympathy from British TV personality Morgan, who posted a provocative tweet blasting the runner-up.
Get a grip, Cilic.
â Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) July 16, 2017
You don't sob like a baby because you're losing. That's pathetic. #WimbledonFinals pic.twitter.com/xF8wB5a9mv
Morgan was lashed by other Twitter users for his insensitivity, including athletes and commentators.
he went on to bash Cilic 10 more times and then infer that his injury wasn't worth complaining about so he's just some out of shape troll
â Nick Delpopolo (@NickforGold) July 16, 2017
Your tweet is inexcusable, plain and simple.
â Andrew Krasny (@AndrewKrasny) July 16, 2017
But he refused to alter his stance.
Cilic may have pulled the wool over your gnarled old ears, but not mine. He got destroyed & blubbed like a baby. Pitiful. https://t.co/7bJ9VRMkgL
â Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) July 16, 2017
And let's say he wasn't injured. This is why people don't reveal mental health issues. Because of idiots like this. https://t.co/rMWrEixaV8
â DavidLaw (@DavidLawTennis) July 16, 2017
Ah, of course..
â Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) July 16, 2017
Mental illness, the new catch-all excuse for losing. https://t.co/Kl3RXYFHL1
Cilic was attempting to become the first Croatian to win the title — and second ever — since his one-time coach Goran Ivanisevic denied Pat Rafter in a classic five-set decider in 2001.
“It was definitely one of the unfortunate days for me to happen. I got a really bad blister,” the sixth seed said.
“Even I felt it in the match with (Sam) Querrey in the semis. Fluid just came down under my callous in the foot.
“I want to thank the physios here, Alejandro and Graham and Dr Phil. They helped.
“The last 30 hours, they were just constantly almost with me. They did as much as they could, but unfortunately I still felt the pain.
“Every time I had to do a reaction fast, fast change of movement, I was unable to do that.”
Classy presser from Cilic. No embarrassment for his midmatch tears, and there shouldn't be. How to criticize someone for caring that much?
â Christopher Clarey (@christophclarey) July 16, 2017
Neither Marin Cilic (742 matches) nor Roger Federer (1,416 matches) has retired mid-match with injury. Impressive streaks, both. #Wimbledon
â Ben Rothenberg (@BenRothenberg) July 16, 2017
Any tennis fan attacking #Cilic right now is no tennis fan at all #Wimbledon #7Tennis
â Chris (@homeister) July 16, 2017
Oh no. This is awful. Poor Cilic looks emotionally and physically broken
â Clare Balding (@clarebalding) July 16, 2017
Despite his heartache, Cilic accepted Federer as a worthy winner of his record eighth Wimbledon men’s singles crown.
“I don’t want to put down his victory in any way,” Cilic said. “He deserved it completely. These things are part of the sport.”