Djokovic's event taught us to be
cautious: French Open director
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[July 06, 2020]
By Sudipto Ganguly
MUMBAI (Reuters) - French Open
organizers are taking every precaution to ensure the Grand Slam does
not meet the same fate as Novak Djokovic's Adria Tour, which was
abandoned after several players tested positive for COVID-19,
tournament director Guy Forget has told Reuters.
Djokovic has come under fire after the charity event was played in
front of packed crowds in Serbia and Croatia and saw players hugging
at the net and posing for pictures together.
Djokovic, Grigor Dimitrov, Borna Coric and Viktor Troicki have all
tested positive for the new coronavirus.
The French Open will allow up to 60% of the usual capacity inside
the Roland Garros grounds when the rescheduled claycourt tournament
starts on Sept. 27 and Forget said there was no chance of them
repeating the mistakes of the Adria Tour.
"Maybe some people were overconfident there," Forget said by
telephone.
"Luckily no one got hurt really bad but even a few cases is too much
and we want to avoid that as much as we can.
"We want to reassure everyone that having people getting ill will be
terrible for us. Let's be really careful, really cautious."
France began easing restrictions in May but has been reporting over
500 cases daily in recent days. Protective masks will be mandatory
for anyone on the move inside Roland Garros and they will be
recommended for those sitting courtside.
The French Tennis Federation (FFT) expect some 20,000 spectators a
day during the early stages of the two-week tournament and about
10,000 per day on the final weekend.
Forget said a successful event needed to have some kind of a crowd.
"We all see soccer on television, it's wonderful but something is
missing without the crowds," the former world No. 4 said.
"We are working closely with the administration, the government, to
make sure we can provide some crowd while still following very
strict security measures."
MORE FLEXIBLE
The U.S. Open in New York, which is scheduled to start on Aug. 31,
will have no spectators and operate under strict health protocols,
including limiting the size of each player's entourage.
Forget said French Open organizers were not planning anything as
strict and were even hoping to ease restrictions.
[to top of second column] |
Tournament director Guy Forget during a press conference
REUTERS/Charles Platiau/File Photo
"Luckily things are a bit more flexible in Europe and in France,
especially," he said. "Hopefully, what we're going to announce will
probably be even more flexible than what we did."
The FFT drew heavy criticism in mid-March when it unilaterally moved
the French Open to September from its scheduled May start amid the
COVID-19 crisis, placing it in the middle of the hardcourt season.
Forget said he understood why some were unhappy about it but thought
saving one of the most prestigious and lucrative tournaments in
tennis was worth it.
"We're not going to celebrate or congratulate ourselves for the
decision we took," the 55-year-old said.
"We thought it's a risk worth taking. Of course we'll make people
unhappy.
"But in mid-October, if we're able to come together and we've been
able to provide revenue for 600 people, I think we will be very
satisfied as a federation and I as a former player."
Forget was reasonably confident the tournament would be a success
but would not relax until after the men's final on Oct. 11.
"I don't want to shout 'victory' before the tournament actually
happens," Forget said.
"As the tournament director I'll only be happy once the men's winner
shakes the hand of the finalist.
"We will all together be able to say, we did it."
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly; editing by Nick Mulvenney and Peter
Rutherford)
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