“Hope You Get Cancer”: Trolls, Threats & Tennis — The Dark Side of the Game
While Katie Boulter was busy dropping aces and bagels at the Nottingham Open, her inbox was lighting up with something far more sinister — death threats, abuse, and twisted messages from punters who’d clearly bet more than they could afford to lose.
“Hope you get cancer.”
“Buy candles and a coffin for your family.”
“I’ll damage your nan’s grave if she’s not dead by tomorrow.”
Yep. Welcome to the toxic world of angry online gamblers, where losing a $20 multi apparently justifies going full psycho.
Online Tennis Abuse: A Serve of Stats
Data Point | Stat |
---|---|
WTA/ITF report timeframe | 2023–2024 |
Total players abused (direct threats) | 458 |
% of abuse linked to gambling | 40% (all abuse) / 77% (personal account abuse) |
No. of cases referred to police | 15 |
Most abused trigger | Losing matches gamblers had money on |
What the Players Are Saying
Katie Boulter
“It’s not just banter. It’s violent. It’s toxic. It’s constant.”
“It’s emotional blackmail from people who lost their rent money.”
Despite beating Lulu Sun 6-2, 6-2, the headlines were about her bravery off the court, not just her power on it.
Alex de Minaur (Aussie tennis pro & Boulter’s fiancé)
“You’re gutted after a loss and boom — here come the trolls.”
“I haven’t checked my socials yet, but I’m sure I’ve got a few keyboard warriors waiting.”
Classic Aussie understatement. Also: maybe don’t check, mate.
Jessica Pegula (WTA Council)
“This is beyond acceptable. Gambling companies and tech giants need to step in.”
Sonay Kartal (UK pro)
“Win or lose, I get it. I report the worst stuff, but it’s scary.”
Harriet Dart
“Some of these trolls have wives and kids on their profiles. It’s nuts.”
“Threats to your family — that crosses the line.”
Solutions Being Tried (And Needed)
Action | Status or Request |
---|---|
AI detection system (Threat Matrix) | Active since 2023 |
Social media reporting tools | Inconsistent; often ignored by platforms |
Mandatory ID for social accounts | Suggested by Harriet Dart; not implemented |
Law enforcement referrals | 15 cases so far |
Gambling regulation discussions | Growing, but slow |
The Aussie Take: Bit of Banter or Legal Matter?
Let’s be honest: Aussies love a punt, but if your first reaction to losing a tennis bet is to threaten a stranger’s nan, you’ve officially failed the vibe check.
Boulter’s fiancé de Minaur nailed it — players cop it when they’re at their lowest, and gamblers lashing out because their multi got flattened by a double fault is just another reminder that sports gambling is eating fans’ brains.
Final Word: Tennis Isn’t Therapy for Your Failed Bets
Tennis players are not your personal investment vehicles. You don’t get to rage-quit their DMs because your same-game multi blew up in your face. Katie Boulter’s bravery in calling this out shows just how normalized this abuse has become — and why it absolutely shouldn’t be.
“This is about awareness,” she said. “I’m not here to cry about it. I’m here to fix it.”
And she’s right. Because if your definition of “fan” involves sending grave threats over a missed second serve… mate, you need help, not WiFi.