The Guardian Australia

Underfire Tennis Australia boss Craig Tiley refuses to resign over Djokovic visa saga

- Emma Kemp at Melbourne Park

Tennis Australia chief executive Craig Tiley has declared he will not resign over the Novak Djokovic visa saga and rejected suggestion­s his governing body paid for the deported world No 1’s legal fees.

It comes as TA faces increasing scrutiny from players concerned the Australian Open’s voluntary Covid-19 testing protocol is exposing them to needless risk.

Tiley, who has remained largely out of the public eye throughout the Djokovic affair, was booed on Wednesday during a rare appearance at Kia Arena to mark Samantha Stosur’s final singles match.

A few hours later he broke his silence in a tense interview with the tournament’s host broadcaste­r, the Nine Network, during which he side-stepped questions about the ill-fated bid to bring the unvaccinat­ed Djokovic to Melbourne Park, saying “we already addressed those questions”.

With the fallout has come calls for Tiley to stand down from his role, which also includes tournament director, forcing the TA board to issue a statement on Monday night supporting Tiley and acknowledg­ing “lessons to learn”.

Tiley has found himself in the firing line over TA’s role in allowing the unvaccinat­ed Djokovic to fly to Melbourne under the belief that a medical exemption approved by TA and a Victorian government independen­t expert panel would be sufficient to enter Australia.

Tiley defended TA’s handling of the matter shortly after Djokovic was first detained saying “we were talking to all parts of government to ensure that one, we were doing the right thing, and the right process with these exemptions”.

Asked by Nine on Thursday whether he has or will consider resigning from his role, the 60-year-old said: “No. We put a statement out recently. I am very focused today on delivering a great event. I am proud of being able to stand up here and you can see what is behind us [at Melbourne Park].

“I am proud of what the team has done and what we have delivered so far. We have had four days of unbelievab­le tennis and great entertainm­ent and we will have that for the next 10 days.”

Tiley also denied claims by former mayor of Melbourne suburb Brighton, John Locco, that TA had footed the bill for Djokovic’s federal court battle to remain in the country, reported to be in vicinity of $500,000.

“I have seen those reports today and we don’t really go into the detail of financial arrangemen­ts we have with players but those reports are simply untrue,” Tiley said.

The live issue at Melbourne Park right now is that of the lack of rigour around testing, which operates on an honesty basis and is compulsory only if players have symptoms. Dual grand slam champion Garbiñe Muguruza, world No 3 Alexander Zverev and British No 2 Heather Watson are among those to have questioned the procedures.

Accredited players, staff and media are provided with daily rapid antigen tests but Muguruza, who lost her round-two match to Frenchwoma­n Alize Cornet on Thursday, described them as an “optional thing”.

“Me, I test every two days by myself in my room,” Cornet said. “It’s not mandatory, I still do it.”

Zverev speculated there were additional players competing with Covid-19 than Frenchman Ugo Humbert, who said on Wednesday he had tested positive, and said he was “kind of doing a bubble for myself, simply because I don’t want to take any risks”.

“We are not getting tested, so I think if we would get tested there would be probably more positives than there are now,” the German said on Wednesday night after his second-round defeat of John Millman. “I’m somebody, I’m here to play the tournament, and I understand that there is a lot of cases in Melbourne, there is a lot of cases in Australia all around.”

Watson said she had not been tested since the Adelaide Internatio­nal earlier this month and had not been asked to since. “No,” she said. “I think once you’ve done your day five, that’s the rules.”

All internatio­nal players had a mandatory PCR test upon arrival in Australia and were required to have a second one between five and seven days later.

“There has been a fair bit written about that,” Tiley said. “Throughout the year the players have been travelling around the world. There have been protocols they have had to follow to do that. We are working closely with the men’s and the women’s and came up with a set of protocols that are more rigorous than their week in, week out travels.

“Coming into Australia every player had to test … on days five and seven they had to test. There is also mandatory symptomati­c testing and every player is provided each day with a rapid antigen kit they can pick up either at the hotel or here onsite. That is really the program we have had going. So far it has worked well and been successful.”

 ?? Photograph: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images ?? Craig Tiley, CEO of Tennis Australia, presents flowers to Samantha Stosur on day four of the 2022 Australian Open at Melbourne Park.
Photograph: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images Craig Tiley, CEO of Tennis Australia, presents flowers to Samantha Stosur on day four of the 2022 Australian Open at Melbourne Park.
 ?? Photograph: TPN/Getty Images ?? Garbiñe Muguruza is one of the players to have questioned the Covid-19 testing arrangemen­ts at the Australian Open.
Photograph: TPN/Getty Images Garbiñe Muguruza is one of the players to have questioned the Covid-19 testing arrangemen­ts at the Australian Open.

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