World number five Andrey Rublev was sensationally defaulted after being accused of swearing at a line judge in the deciding set of his semi-final at the Dubai Open.
The combustible Russian was trailing 6-5 in the third against Alexander Bublik when he appeared to say something to the line judge.
![Andrey Rublev appeared to say something to a line judge](https://images.performgroup.com/di/library/omnisport/f2/2c/0bfa23a78fae493aaf37d47b7826ea5e.jpg?t=-86853923)
ATP supervisor Roland Herfel came down to the court accompanied by a Russian speaker, who claimed Rublev had sworn in his native language.
Rublev protested, insisting he was speaking in English, while Bublik also backed his opponent.
“I didn’t say ‘f******’. I swear to God. This is huge. I swear to God,” said Rublev.
![Dubai Tennis Championships](https://images.performgroup.com/di/library/omnisport/4f/7f/34cfeb9d039b4e0abcd373db00d48118.jpg?t=-86853923)
The offence would usually merit a warning in the first instance, but the 26-year-old was defaulted by umpire Miriam Bley amid jeers from the crowd in Dubai.
It was a controversial end to a tight match, with Kazakhstan’s Bublik progressing to the final 6-7 (4) 7-6 (5) 6-5.