Australian Open beats the odds to lay out a blueprint
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[February 22, 2021]
By Nick Mulvenney
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Naomi Osaka and
Novak Djokovic were rightly hailed as deserved Australian Open
champions at the weekend but the ashen-faced former tennis coach
standing behind them on the podium might be considered the real hero
of the year's first Grand Slam.
Tournament director Craig Tiley and his Tennis Australia team faced
down sizeable odds to get the tournament up and running, albeit by
the skin of their teeth at times, while much of the world was still
dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic.
"At the beginning, I think there were many people who doubted we
could pull it off," South African Tiley told reporters in Melbourne
on Monday.
"We can look back on it now as a highly successful event in the
circumstances. I believe in the coming month, there will be a
realisation of the extent of what we managed to achieve in pulling
off what we did."
In a project unique in the annals of sport, more than 1,000 players
and support staff were flown to Australia on charter flights from
around the world and quarantined for 14 days from mid-January.
Melbourne is the biggest city in the state of Victoria, which had
endured one of the longest and strictest lockdowns in the world to
all but eradicate community transmission of COVID-19.
Perhaps Tiley's greatest achievement was to convince a local
government determined to keep the virus out of the state to let the
players in, and to allow crowds to watch them.
The tournament survived the infection of one of the quarantine hotel
workers only five days before it was due to start, but only after
everyone in the tennis cohort had been tested for the virus again.
Crowds were present for just five days of action until Victoria went
into a snap lockdown in response to a small outbreak of the variant
of the virus associated with Britain.
"BLUEPRINT"
The fans returned in reduced numbers from last Thursday, however,
and were present in sufficient numbers to create an atmosphere at
the weekend's finals.
Tiley believes that the Australian Open has now set an example that
other sports events - including the Tokyo Olympics - can follow, but
only if they make a commitment to some form of quarantine.
"This was the first time since the start of the pandemic began that
there was a sport and entertainment event that had crowds (and) had
every top player bar a few that couldn't make it," he added.
"I think it is a blueprint that works, it requires more resources
and more time, but that's a commitment that you have to make."
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Russia's Daniil Medvedev
in action during his final match against Serbia's Novak Djokovic.
Crowds are at a reduced capacity for this years event following the
outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) REUTERS/Asanka
Brendon Ratnayake
The 14 days of quarantine prompted an outpouring of complaints from
players. Most were allowed out to train for five hours a day but 72
were forced into total lockdown after passengers on their flights
tested positive for COVID-19.
The stress of fulfilling his masterplan was clearly etched on
Tiley's face during the weekend's trophy ceremonies and he revealed
the toll it had taken on him in an interview with local media on
Sunday.
In order to assuage athletes not used to confinement, Tiley had
committed to spending hours on Zoom calls each day listening to
their concerns.
"I got abused on the calls. It was significant," Tiley told
Australian Associated Press (AAP). "Normally when you take heat, you
take it once. This was 15 straight days. It's like being attacked
for 15 straight days, verbally."
Tennis Australia also ran up a huge financial bill for putting on
the tournament, especially after the snap lockdown robbed them of
crowds in the middle weekend - usually the busiest of the fortnight.
Tiley said Tennis Australia's cash reserves of A$80 million ($62.96
million) had been exhausted and the governing body had taken out a
loan to get them through to next year.
Prize money may drop a little in 2022, Tiley suggested, but there
was no doubt the Australian Open would be back.
"We started planning it a week ago ... 2022 is going to be a
magnificent year," he said.
"If we're still in a version of the pandemic, we'll be well prepared
for that. Any single thing you could list that could happen to an
event, we had it these last two weeks."
($1 = 1.2706 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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