Nadal, Serena support strict COVID-19 protocols in Australia
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[January 27, 2021]
(Reuters) - Rafa Nadal feels
tennis players are privileged to be able to compete at the
Australian Open during the COVID-19 pandemic and urged fellow
participants to have a wider perspective of the strict health
measures in the country.
About 1,200 participants were allowed to fly to Australia for the
summer of tennis as thousands of its citizens are unable to return
home due to travel restrictions.
Players are serving 14 days of isolation during which they are
allowed five hours outside their rooms each day to train for the
year's first Grand Slam, which has been delayed by three weeks and
will be played from Feb. 8-21.
But 72 players have been confined to their rooms after passengers on
the charter flights that carried them to Australia tested positive
to the virus.
Nadal, along with top players like Novak Djokovic and Serena
Williams, is isolating in Adelaide and said he felt "very sorry" for
those in hard isolation.
"But when we came here we knew that the measures were going to be
strict because we knew that the country is doing great with the
pandemic," the Spaniard told CNN.
"It's normal to complain in some way but on the other hand when you
have little bit wider perspective of what's going on ... you see how
many are dying around the world.
"You see how many people are losing their father, their mum, without
having the chance to say goodbye. It's a real thing, that's what's
happening in my country for example. Close people to me are
suffering this situation."
Australia has recorded more than 22,000 cases and 909 deaths from
the novel coronavirus. It had no new local cases for the 10th
straight day on Wednesday.
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Rafael Nadal is seen
waving from his balcony at the M Suites accommodation in North
Adelaide, where tennis players are undergoing mandatory quarantine
ahead of the Australian Open. REUTERS/Morgan Sette
After the 14-day isolation, players will be allowed to train
normally and then compete at tune-up events next week.
"The world is suffering in general, so we can't complain," Nadal
added. "You have to stay a little more positive. I feel that we are
privileged people today, having the chance to keep doing our jobs."
Organisers also received backing from 23-time Grand Slam winner
Williams, who has travelled to Australia with three-year-old
daughter Olympia.
"It's super, super strict, but it's really good," she said on The
Late Show With Stephen Colbert.
"It's insane and super intense but it's super good because after
that you can have a new normal like we were used to this time last
year in the United States.
"It's definitely hard with a three-year-old to be in the hotel all
day, but it's worth it because you want everyone to be safe at the
end of the day."
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly in Mumbai; editing by Stephen Coates)
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