Australia tennis chief urges strict quarantine for Tokyo Olympics
Send a link to a friend
[February 10, 2021]
By Melanie Burton and Leela de Kretser
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Making the
Olympics safe from coronavirus will be difficult for Tokyo without
stiff quarantine measures that will also inspire athletes and
spectators with the confidence to attend events, Australia's top
tennis official said on Wednesday.
The Japanese capital is expected to welcome 11,000 athletes at the
end of July, when it holds the summer Games postponed from last year
because of the virus, but is not currently considering wholesale
quarantine for them.
Speaking on the sidelines of the Australian Open, the first major
Grand Slam event to host crowds, the chief executive of Tennis
Australia said his experience of organising the contest suggested
the Olympics needed rigorous quarantine measures.
"I've seen the playbook for the Olympics and I've looked at it
carefully," Craig Tiley told Reuters. "And compared to what we've
done, we've had a far more rigorous program than is being proposed
at the Olympics."
It took a gruelling effort by his 600-strong team over the last 11
months to get the year's biggest sporting event, the Australian
Open, ready for crowds amid the pandemic.
That included ferrying 1,200 players, officials and media on 17
flights from 8 countries, arranging 14 days of quarantine and more
than 30,000 tests, while limiting any chance for the virus to return
to a city that stamped it out with four months of hard lockdown last
year.
Despite all that rigour, 10 people still tested positive, forcing
the abandonment of a full day of warm-up matches while further
testing and isolation measures were adopted.
No new related cases have emerged, but Tiley is aware that there is
still a long way to go.
"I love the Olympic Games," he said. "I'd like to see it be
successful. But with the experience we had, I cannot see it
working."
Tiley suggested that Olympics organisers extend the games to allow
for longer quarantine periods, with athletes training in their own
accommodation, such as on a university campus, before staged
competition periods for each event.
"There's no such thing as no risk," he added. "But I cannot see it
being done any other way, unless you are willing to accept a much
higher risk of spreading the virus."
[to top of second column] |
Craig Tiley, CEO of
Tennis Australia before a press conference. REUTERS/Loren Elliott
Australia, with a tally of about 28,900 infections and 909 deaths,
has proved to be one of the nations most successful in the campaign
to restrain the virus.
It had technically eliminated community spread last month, but
authorities and citizens are on edge since a spattering of cases
that emerged in the past week among hotel workers are thought to be
highly infectious strains.
That is believed to be one reason for low attendance of about 17,650
during the first two days of the tennis championship, amounting to
just half the reduced COVID-19 capacity and a quarter of last year's
figure.
Longer incubation periods for new strains suggest that quarantine
needs to be extended beyond two weeks, Tiley added.
He said he hoped to evolve a model that encourages audiences to
global sporting events over the next few years, and share his
conclusions with others as well as the International Olympic
Committee and the Japanese Tennis Association.
"Vaccination is not the silver bullet," he said. "I don't see
physical distancing and the wearing of masks and the quarantine
going (away) anytime soon."
Melbourne Park has been divided into three distinct zones, with more
than 800 dispensers of hand sanitiser installed, in addition to QTR
code checks, click-and-collect arrangements ffor food and beverages
and daily deep cleaning.
Organisers will need to make fans feel safe to entice them to
attend, Tiley added.
"I think 2022 is going to be different to 2021, but not much
different when it comes to health and the protection of ourselves
from each other, because of the spread of the virus."
To read related story, "Live sport will bring digital experiences to
stadiums -Tennis Australia CEO," please click on
(Interactive graphic tracking global spread of coronavirus: https://graphics.reuters.com/world-coronavirus-tracker-and-maps)
(Reporting by Leela de Kretser and Melanie Burton in Melbourne)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |