LONDON (AP) 鈥 The All England Club, somewhat ironically, is blaming 鈥渉uman error鈥 for a glaring mistake by the electronic system that replaced human line judges this year at Wimbledon.

The CEO of the club, Sally Bolton, said Monday that the technology was "inadvertently deactivated" by someone for three points at Centre Court during a day earlier in the fourth round. On one point, a shot by Kartal clearly landed past the baseline but wasn't called out by the automated setup 鈥 called Hawk-Eye 鈥 because it had been shut off.

Hours after Bolton spoke with reporters, the club issued a statement to announce that it 鈥渞emoved the ability for Hawk-Eye operators to manually deactivate the ball tracking,鈥 meaning 鈥渢his error cannot now be repeated due to the system changes we have made.鈥

Bolton declined to say who made the mistake on Sunday or how, exactly, it occurred or whether that person would face any consequences or be re-trained. She did note that there were other people at fault: the chair umpire, Nico Helwerth, and two who should have let him know the system was temporarily down 鈥 the review official and the Hawk-Eye official.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 need to put line judges back on the court again,鈥 Bolton said. 鈥淲e needed the system to be active.鈥

Is Wimbledon using AI for line calls this year?

No. But like most big tennis tournaments nowadays 鈥 鈥 Wimbledon has replaced its line judges with cameras that are supposed to follow the balls on every shot to determine whether they land in or out.

There are those, particularly in the British media, who keep referring to this as part of the ever-increasing creep of AI into day-to-day life, but Bolton objected to the use of that term in this case.

鈥淭he point I would want to emphasize 鈥 and perhaps contrary to some of the reporting we鈥檝e seen 鈥 is it鈥檚 not an artificial intelligence system. And it is electronic in the sense that the camera-tracking technology is set up to call the lines automatically, but it requires a human element to ensure that the system is functional,鈥 Bolton said. 鈥淪o it is not AI. There are some humans involved. And in this instance, it was a human error.鈥

What happened on the missed call at Wimbledon?

Russia's Pavlyuchenkova was one point from winning a game for a 5-4 lead in the first set against Britain's Kartal on Sunday when a shot by Kartal landed long. But there was no ruling from Hawk-Eye.

After a delay, Helwerth decided the point should be replayed, which Pavlyuchenkova thought showed bias toward an opponent competing in her home country. With Hawk-Eye back up and running after a delay, Kartal won that game, but Pavlyuchenkova took that set and the match.

The All England Club looked into what happened and found that the line-calling system actually was off for three points before anyone noticed.

The system itself worked 鈥渙ptimally,鈥 Bolton said repeatedly.

鈥淚n this instance, sadly,鈥 she said, 鈥渋t was the human part of the operation that made a mistake.鈥

Why was the Hawk-Eye system accidentally turned off during a match?

Bolton said the system is shut down between matches 鈥 鈥渁nd the humans are the people that need to do the activating and deactivating" 鈥 and someone accidentally did so during Pavlyuchenkova vs. Kartal.

Asked why, Bolton responded: 鈥淲ell, I don鈥檛 know. It was a mistake, obviously. ... I wasn't sat there, so I don't know what happened."

She said Helwerth could have made a ruling himself on the controversial non-call, the way he did on the prior pair of points, but instead just decided to pause the match.

鈥淚鈥檓 assuming,鈥 Bolton said, 鈥渉e felt he had not seen it properly.鈥

Pavlyuchenkova said after the match the official told her he thought the ball was out.

What do players think about the use of technology at Wimbledon?

Players are divided on whether there even should be electronic rulings during matches 鈥 unless it is fool-proof 鈥 or whether there should be a return to Wimbledon's old way of doing things.

Since 2007 through last year, there was a combination of the human touch and technology: There were line judges on court to make calls, but players were allowed to challenge and ask for a video replay of a point if they thought there was a mistake.

鈥淚t鈥檚 such a big match, big event,鈥 Pavlyuchenkova said. 鈥淪ince we have already automatic line-calling and so much invested into this, we should probably look into something else to have better decisions.鈥

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Associated Press writer Mattias Kar茅n contributed to this report.

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Howard Fendrich has been the AP鈥檚 tennis writer since 2002. Find his stories here: . More AP tennis:

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