The umpire at the centre of the Serena Williams sexism scandal has broken his silence over Sunday's US Open final.
Speaking to Tribuna Expresso in his native Portugal, Carlos Ramos said: "I'm fine, given the circumstances. It's a delicate situation, but 'à la carte' arbitration does not exist. Do not worry about me!"
Representatives from the United States Tennis Association (USTA) and Women's Tennis Association (WTA) had publicly supported Williams' accusations of sexism against Ramos, but he received widespread support from former officials and was publicly backed by his employer the International Tennis Federation (ITF) on Monday.
The ITF's belated support reflected the growing consensus that Ramos handled the situation impressively in what were very difficult circumstances.
Ramos gave three code violations to Williams - for on-court coaching, racket abuse and verbal abuse - all of which were justified, and between them added up to a game penalty. The final offence saw Williams call Ramos "a liar" and "a thief".