Training during quarantine essential for Australian Open: Tiley
Send a link to a friend
[October 15, 2020]
SYDNEY (Reuters) - The
Australian Open will only go ahead in January if agreement can be
reached with local authorities to allow players to practice while
they undergo quarantine in Melbourne, tournament director Craig
Tiley said on Thursday.
Tiley is confident the Grand Slam will go ahead but conceded that
the ATP Cup and warm-up tournaments might need to be switched to
Melbourne if the borders between Australia's states remain closed
because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Melbourne remains locked down after a second spike in cases of the
novel coronavirus and everyone arriving in Australia must currently
quarantine for 14 days in a hotel at their own expense.
Variations have been allowed in some states to allow sports teams to
train while in isolation and Tiley believes something similar will
be essential for the Australian Open to go ahead.
"If a player has to quarantine and be stuck in a hotel for two weeks
just before their season, that won't happen," Tiley told Australian
Associated Press.
"You can't ask players to quarantine for two weeks and then step out
and be ready to play a Grand Slam.
"We completely accept that everyone coming from overseas has got to
have two weeks in quarantine," he added.
"What we are negotiating, or what we're trying to have an agreement
on, is that we set up a quarantine environment where they can train
and go between the hotel and the courts in those two weeks."
Tiley has always said that flexible planning via various graded
scenarios would be the key to getting the tournament up and running
as long as the global health crisis continued.
[to top of second column]
|
Tennis Australia CEO, Craig Tiley during a press conference Action
Images via Reuters/Andrew Couldridge/File Photo
He has revised his expected crowd numbers from the 50% he predicted
in August down to a likely 25% of the normal number of visitors to
Melbourne Park -- roughly 100,000 people.
The $15 million ATP Cup, a joint venture between the men's tour and
Tennis Australia (TA), debuted last year at the heart of a rejigged
Australian Open warm-up schedule, which also included women's events
in Adelaide, Brisbane and Hobart.
Tiley, who doubles as TA chief executive, said holding the ATP Cup
over three cities would be impossible if state borders remained
closed and is hoping the improving health conditions would lead to a
relaxation.
"We're getting to crunch time now. We need commitments from the
governments and the health officers," he said.
"We need to kind of know in the next two weeks, maybe a month, that
this is what can happen: borders are going to open and then we can
have a multi-city event.
"If we cannot have a multi-city event, we've got to reconsider
everything."
(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney, editing by Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
[© 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.
|