Australian Open players begin leaving COVID-19 quarantine
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[January 28, 2021]
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Australian Open
players were given the green light to begin exiting COVID-19
quarantine on Thursday after spending two weeks strictly confined to
a biosecurity hub.
The first group among the 960 players, coaches and officials
isolating at three Melbourne hotels were allowed to leave from 6
p.m. local time (0700 GMT), with the rest expected to depart by
Sunday, Victoria state health officials said.
Players isolating in South Australia state, including Novak Djokovic
and Serena Williams, were also to be released ahead of an exhibition
tournament in Adelaide on Friday.
Players will be free to move around the cities and surrounding
regions so long as they abide by local social distancing
restrictions.
Unlike the United States and European countries, which are battling
to contain the virus, Australia has not had a case of community
transmission for 11 straight days and residents have regained most
of their pre-COVID freedoms.
CQV said it had not recorded any new COVID-19 infections among the
Australian Open cohort on Thursday.
There remained a total of five active cases, who will need to spend
longer in quarantine depending on when they tested positive.
Spain's Paula Badosa was the first player to reveal she had
contracted the virus when she tested positive on her seventh day in
quarantine. She was moved to a "health hotel" last Thursday to begin
two more weeks of isolation and complained about the conditions to
Spanish media.
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Some players expressed confusion over their scheduled departure.
American Tennys Sandgren, who was among the 72 players put into a
stricter quarantine after passengers on their flights to Australia
tested positive, was unhappy he would not be able to check out of
isolation until Friday.
"I just found out we're not going to be able to leave
the room until midnight tomorrow which will put us out close to 15 days
in this room," the former men's quarter-finalist said in a video posted
on Instagram on Thursday.
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Tennis players undergo
quarantine ahead of Australian Open - Adelaide, Australia - January
23, 2021 Food is being delivered to the M Suites accommodation in
North Adelaide, where tennis players are undergoing mandatory
quarantine ahead of the Australian Open. REUTERS/Morgan Sette
"That's also another day we can't practise."
Sandgren tested positive for COVID-19 two weeks ago before his
flight from Los Angeles but said he was allowed to board following
intervention from Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley.
Georgian Oksana Kalashnikova, the women's world number 63, was also
unhappy with her scheduled departure.
She posted a meme on Twitter saying, "Why??" and wrote: "When
Australian Government orders u to stay another extra day just
because."
A few of the top players in Adelaide, including home hero and
women's world number one Ash Barty, will play in a charity
exhibition in Adelaide on Friday.
"It's going to be a really good day in Adelaide," said Barty, who
plays Simona Halep in an evening match.
"I can't wait to get out there."
Last year's Australian Open finalist Dominic Thiem plays Rafa Nadal
in the other evening match in Adelaide.
"It's the first day out of quarantine, the first match in front of a
crowd for a long time, so I'm super excited," the Austrian said.
(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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