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Look back at the insulting late fathers most shameful dummy -spit by Jelena Dokic – when he was opened to swing a fish to a woman

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Disturbing images of Jelena Dokic’s insulting father Damir who is kicked out of the US to throw a piece of salmon to a woman 25 years ago after his death turned up again.

The Aussie tennis icon was commentator announced her father’s death in an emotional post on social media on Wednesday, while recognizing their ‘difficult and painful’ relationship.

Jelena suffered terribly abuse from the hands of her father from the age of six began to play tennis.

Damir, who was the tennis coach of his daughter early in her career, received a reputation in the tennis community for having a heavy mood and was kicked out of the four Grand Slam tournaments within a period of 12 months.

In September 2000 the man was once called the ‘tennis father from Hell’ and was banned from the US Open in a bizarre incident that started as a dispute in a piece of $ 10 salmon.

Damir abused verbally a food service employee in the player lounge in the National Tennis Center after he objected to the prize and the size of a part of the salmon he was served.

The dispute escalated when the tennis coach threw the fish at the female employee.

Jelena Remembered the incident in the Channel Nine documentary Unbreakable: The Jelena Dokic Story, adapted from her 2017 memoirs with the same name.

Damir Dokic was kicked out of the US open in 2000 after he had thrown a piece of salmon to a woman in the cafeteria

Damir Dokic was kicked out of the US open in 2000 after he had thrown a piece of salmon to a woman in the cafeteria

The incident that led Damir Dokic to be kicked as a dispute over part of the salmon

The incident that led Damir Dokic to be kicked as a dispute over part of the salmon

Images broadcast in the documentary showed the head of the tournament of security Pete Pistone that guided Damir to the parking lot.

“Please don’t touch me,” Damir said, resisting himself.

He then became aggressive and burned the guard an ‘f ** ing idiot’.

Jelena was then only 17.

“I started to become really overwhelmed and emotional, and I started crying,” she remembered.

“For me this was an everyday business. It was just hell, but now it was also very public.

Mr. Pistone is supposed to have said: ‘I have never seen a Corrected Mother in the world’ in reference to Damir.

The embarrassing incident was one in a long line of aggressive moments thanks to the father of the tennis legend.

Damir Dokic (depicted directly with his wife and daughter) was kicked out of the four tennis Grand Slams within 12 months in 2000-01

Damir Dokic (depicted directly with his wife and daughter) was kicked out of the four tennis Grand Slams within 12 months in 2000-01

Damir Dokic was escorted by the police in front of the site in Wimbledon after he had walked around with a flag and made the phone from a reporter

Damir Dokic was escorted by the police in front of the site in Wimbledon after he had walked around with a flag and made the phone from a reporter

Earlier that same year, Damir was accused of attacking a cameraman on the Australian Open.

Five months later, Damir was escorted by the police from Wimbledon for drunk parading by a flag and breaking the phone from a reporter shortly after his daughter won a competition.

He was drunk heavily prior to the game before walking around the Arena waving with a cross of St George and screaming slogans such as “The Women’s Association are fascists and politics” and “The queen is for democracy, everything else in this country is fascist.”

While bewildered tennis fans, Damir then approached the main press building in which he became involved in a heated conversation with journalists before he destroyed a mobile phone.

The following year at the Australian Open, Damir claimed that there were irregularities in the draw after the loss of Jelena for the American star Lindsay Davenport.

“I think the draw has only been determined for her,” he claimed.

Damir was banned from the tournament because of offensive behavior.

In 2009 he was imprisoned for 15 months after he threatened to kill the Australian ambassador in Serbia With a grenade worker after the badly armed police had arrested him and seized an arsenal of weapons with two homemade bombs.

The was later reduced to 12 months after a second profession.

In the documentary about her life, Jelena bravely opened about the abuse she suffered by her father and the pressure she felt to win because Damir would regularly blame.

Watching images of himself playing in the documentary, she said: ‘I am 16 years old here. I played no. 1 Martina Hingis and I knew that if I lost the consequences, were catastrophic.

‘One day after I was lost, I knew what was going to happen … I started to feel really broken.

‘There was not an inch of skin that was not bruised. I am 17 and because of his actions, [I] became the most hated person. ‘

In another moving incident, she described her father who kicked her head until she lost consciousness after she lost a competition.

Jelena Dokic shared this youth photo of her with her father Damir after his death

Jelena Dokic shared this youth photo of her with her father Damir after his death

Jelena Dokic was abused by her tennis coach father from the age of six

Jelena Dokic was abused by her tennis coach father from the age of six

Jelena paid tribute to her alienated father on Wednesday in a long and emotional position after he confirmed that he had died on Friday.

“As you know, my relationship with my father has been difficult and painful with a lot of history,” she started.

‘Despite everything and how difficult, difficult, difficult and not even existed in the last 10 years, our relationship and communication was never easy to lose a parent and a father, even one of whom you are alienated.

“The loss of a alienated parent has a difficult and complicated sadness.”

Jelena admitted that she had conflicting emotions when she shared a youth photo of her as a little girl who hugged her father, with whom she had not spoken for 10 years.

“Before the end of this chapter, I choose to concentrate on a good memory like this photo,” she continued.

“And as always and especially important for who I am as a person and what I want to stand for what respect, grace, kindness, dignity and empathy is, I will also be that person in this situation.”

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