Australian Open to start on February 8, players can train during
quarantine - reports
Send a link to a friend
[December 02, 2020] MELBOURNE
(Reuters) - Next year's Australian Open could be pushed back to a
Feb. 8-21 window and players would be allowed to train outside their
hotel rooms during quarantine, Australian media reported on
Wednesday.
Tennis Australia has been in talks with the Victoria state
government over the coronavirus protocols to be established for
those arriving ahead of the Grand Slam at Melbourne Park, which is
currently scheduled for Jan. 18-31.
State officials have confirmed players will have to undergo
quarantine and that the tournament will likely start one or two
weeks later than scheduled.
Victoria state, of which Melbourne is the capital, has not recorded
a new case of COVID-19 in over a month after a nearly four-month
hard lockdown to combat a second wave of infections.
According to reports widely carried in the Australian media, Tennis
Australia Chief Executive Craig Tiley confirmed in an email to
players that authorities had agreed to allow players to train during
two weeks of strict quarantine.
"It's taken a while, but the great news is it looks like we are
going to be able to hold the AO on Feb. 8," the reports quoted Tiley
as saying.
"Players will have to quarantine for two weeks from 15 January, but
the Victorian Government has agreed to special conditions for AO
participants - agreeing that they need to be able to prepare for a
grand slam.
"There will be strict conditions, but after quarantine, players are
free to stay where they want, go where they want, play lead-in
matches and then compete in an AO in front of significant crowds in
a great Melbourne atmosphere for the first time in many months."
[to top of second column]
|
Tennis Australia
CEO, Craig Tiley during a press conference Action Images via
Reuters/Andrew Couldridge
French
newspaper L'Equipe also reported a Feb. 8 start for the year's first
Grand Slam, adding that players would be allowed out of quarantine
to train for up to five hours a day.
Tennis Australia said it was awaiting confirmation from the Victoria
government.
"We do hope we will have announcements very soon, but await details
and sign off from the Victorian government," the governing body said
in a statement.
The region's Premier Daniel Andrews said on Wednesday that the
details of quarantine arrangements were being finalised.
"Unlike every other tennis tournament that the men's and women's
tours will play this year, only the Australian Open is a tennis
tournament in a city where it can likely be assumed that those
players will bring the virus here," he said.
"So we are unique in that we've built something that no one else has
built across the nation ... and on that basis, we have to safeguard
that, (and) I think we can."
(Reporting by Ian Ransom and Sudipto Ganguly in Mumbai; Editing by
Alison Williams)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|