There has been intense speculation over Djokovic's participation
in both events, with the 34-year-old, who is opposed to COVID-19
vaccinations, repeatedly declining to say if he has been
inoculated against the virus.
Organisers of the Australian Open, which starts on Jan. 17, have
stipulated that all participants must be vaccinated against the
coronavirus or have a medical exemption granted by an
independent panel of experts.
"Novak Djokovic has officially withdrawn from the ATP Cup in
Sydney, we have no update as yet on his plans for the Australian
Open," a Tennis Australia spokeswoman said in an emailed
statement.
"Regarding the medical exemption process, which pertains to all
players, there is a rigorous and independent process in place.
As with all medical information it is subject to
confidentiality."
The global men's tennis governing body ATP did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
ATP Cup organisers said Serbia's team would now be led by world
number 33 Dusan Lajovic.
Owing to Djokovic's current world ranking, Serbia received top
billing for the 16-team event, which runs from Jan. 1-9, and
have been drawn in Group A along with Norway, Chile and Spain.
Djokovic has won a record nine Australian Open titles, including
the last three, and is in a three-way tie on 20 major titles
with Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal in the all-time list.
His father Srdjan told a Serbian television channel last month
that Djokovic would probably pull out nL4N2SK0VQ of the major,
saying Tennis Australia's stance on mandatory vaccination was
tantamount to "blackmail".
The season-opening ATP Cup also saw Austria, which failed the
eligibility criteria following the withdrawal of Dominic Thiem
and Dennis Novak, replaced by France.
Russia, which won the 2021 title, will be missing Andrey Rublev
and Aslan Karatsev from that team.
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly in Mumbai; editing by John
Stonestreet and Ken Ferris)
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