No major financial impact from
Wimbledon cancellation, say organisers
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[June 29, 2020]
(Reuters) - Wimbledon's
cancellation due to the COVID-19 pandemic this year will have no
major financial impact on British tennis, outgoing All England club
Chief Executive Richard Lewis has said.
The grasscourt Grand Slam was scheduled to start on Monday but was
cancelled for the first time since World War Two in April.
The All England Lawn Tennis Club (AELTC) said its spending plans
would not have to be curtailed.
"It won't be severely impacted. If you have to cancel, it's great to
have insurance," Lewis, who will step down as the CEO next month,
told British media.
"We're still in a very good position, we're financially very stable.
British tennis is going to be pretty well protected."
However, Wimbledon would not have similar insurance cover in place
next year, he added.
"That's impossible in the current climate," he said. "When I started
in 2012, there were some signs that things were not insurable,
because of communicable diseases that had taken place, like Sars and
swine flu.
"In the immediate aftermath you can't get insurance but fairly soon
after that you can start to get insurance again, the market returns.
So there won't be insurance next year.
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eneral view of Court 6 at the All England Lawn Tennis Club AELTC/Bob
Martin/Handout via REUTERS
"But just because we've made one claim, it won't affect us in the
long term."
The U.S. Open is going ahead as scheduled from the end of August
while the French Open has moved to the end of September from May and
Sally Bolton, who will succeed Lewis, said the AELTC would learn all
they can from the tournaments.
"We've got the U.S. Open and Roland Garros being staged later this
year and we will be looking closely at what they do, working with
the constraints they find themselves under and learning what we
can," said Bolton.
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly in Mumbai; editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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