ATP Cup kicks off revamped
Australian season
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[January 02, 2020]
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Rafa Nadal
and Novak Djokovic - the top two men's players in the world - will
kick off a revamped Australian tennis summer on Friday with the
inaugural edition of the ATP Cup team event.
The ATP Cup will see 24 nations contesting in Perth, Brisbane and
Sydney over 10 days for the first time and will give the top men's
players a solid platform to prepare for the Australian Open.
To accommodate the $15 million ATP Cup, which also offers 750
ranking points, the year's first Grand Slam has been pushed back
from its usual mid-month start by a week and will kick off at
Melbourne Park from Jan. 20.
The participating teams for the event have been determined by the
singles ranking of their best player and accordingly all top seven
players in the world, barring Swiss great Roger Federer have arrived
in Australia.
Federer pulled out of the event to spend more time with his family.
Britain's Andy Murray and Japan's Kei Nishikori are other notable
absentees due to injury.
Australian Open holder Djokovic will make his ATP Cup debut for
Serbia against South Africa in Brisbane on Saturday while Nadal will
lead Spain into action against Georgia in Perth on the same day.
"We spend quality time and it's fun, because the concept of ATP Cup
is a team concept, team format, and so it does give us an
opportunity to represent our country and be a part of the team,
which is not something that we do experience throughout the year
very often," Djokovic told reporters.
DAVIS CUP SIMILARITY
The tournament, however, comes just six weeks after the inaugural
edition of the revamped Davis Cup, the International Tennis
Federation's flagship event, which was similar in nature and
question remains if the two can co-exist in the future.
The Davis Cup was held in November in Madrid's La Caja Magica with
18 nations playing a week-long soccer World Cup-style showpiece and
Djokovic, the president of the ATP's Player Council, has led calls
for a merger of the two tournaments.
[to top of second column] |
Winner Novak Djokovic (R) of Serbia and runner-up Rafa Nadal of
Spain attend the award ceremony after the men's singles final match
at the China Open Tennis Tournament in Beijing, China, October 11,
2015. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
The new ATP event has also had major implications for the other
tennis events in Australia that have traditionally been used by
players to prepare for the year's first Grand Slam.
The ATP Cup left no room in the revamped tennis calendar for the
mixed-gender Hopman Cup, which is popular with players and has
traditionally served as a warm-up for the Australian Open.
With Brisbane hosting matches in the ATP Cup, next week's Brisbane
International will be a women's only tournament while the Sydney
International - one of the oldest tennis tournaments in the world
dating back to 1885 - has also gone missing.
Sydney's loss proved to be Adelaide's gain as the city will host the
Adelaide International from Jan. 12, where Djokovic and women's
world number one Ash Barty are the top draws.
ATP Finals champion Stefanos Tsitsipas and reigning Wimbledon
champion Simona Halep will also play in Adelaide.
Sydney, which will host both the knockout stage of the ATP Cup and
the group stage, also has to deal with apprehensions about smoke
from the deadly conflagrations impacting play.
Great Britain team captain Tim Henman said those concerns were
ultimately not the priority.
"In the context of what this country is going through with the
bushfires and for us having to deal with perhaps slightly poor air
quality, I think right there is the perspective," he told reporters.
"I don't envisage it being a problem at all."
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly in Mumbai; editing by Christian
Radnedge)
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