Wimbledon, LTA appeal against WTA fines for Russians' exclusion
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[July 05, 2022]
By Sudipto Ganguly
LONDON (Reuters) - Wimbledon organisers
and Britain's tennis authorities said on Monday they have appealed
against fines handed to them by the women's governing body, WTA, for
excluding Russian and Belarussian players from this year's
grasscourt events.
The All England Club (AELTC), which organises the Grand Slam, and
the Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) banned players from the two
countries at tournaments in Britain following Russia's invasion of
Ukraine, which Moscow calls a 'special operation'.
The WTA and its men's counterpart ATP called the move discriminatory
and decided to strip all ranking points from Wimbledon while warning
the LTA of sanctions.
As part of the penalties, the LTA was slapped with a fine of
£620,000 (about $753,000) while the AELTC has been asked to pay
£207,000 ($250,000), the Daily Mail reported.
"I think the first thing to say is that it is the subject of a legal
process so I can't comment specifically on that," AELTC CEO Sally
Bolton told reporters at Wimbledon on Monday.
"We stand by the decision we made, we are deeply disappointed at the
reactions of the tours to that decision and I probably can't say
anything more on that at this time, I'm afraid."
Bolton confirmed that the AELTC has appealed against the fine while
an LTA source said it has done the same.
The WTA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The world governing bodies of tennis have themselves banned Russia
and Ukraine from team events but individual athletes are allowed to
compete in tournaments as neutrals.
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Wimbledon - All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, London,
Britain - July 3, 2022 General view of spectators on the hill during
the fourth round REUTERS/Matthew Childs
The AELTC stand on Russians and Belarussians was
the first time players have been excluded on grounds of nationality
since the immediate post-World War Two era when German and Japanese
players were banned.
"It was an incredibly difficult and challenging decision to make,"
Bolton said. "It was not one we took lightly. We thought carefully
about the ramifications of taking it.
"But it was absolutely the right decision for us. It was the only
viable option in the context of the Government guidance in place and
we stand by that decision.
"We accept that others will take a different view, but we absolutely
stand by that decision."
($1 = 0.8232 pounds)
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly; editing by Ken Ferris)
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