Montreal Gazette

More exhausting than a five setter

Massive layers of security at U.S. Open

- The Associated Press

TOM HAYS

In a less-travelled part of the 46-acre Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, an imposing black metal fence offers a reminder of the multiple security worries that come with hosting the U.S. Open.

New York Police Department counterter­rorism officials insisted that the fence, near a new 8,000-seat grandstand stadium, be reinforced earlier this year with thick strands of cable capable of withstandi­ng a crash from a truck loaded with explosives.

“A lot of this stuff is off the radar, but it goes back to what’s happening in the world,” the event’s security director, Michael Rodriguez, said during a flurry of last-minute preparatio­ns for Monday’s opening matches.

Attacks in Europe and mass shootings in the U.S. have created a climate that’s added to vigilance over this year’s U.S. Open, which already posed daunting security challenges because of its sheer size: 700,000 spectators over two weeks packed into two stadiums, two grandstand­s and other seating at more than a dozen other tennis courts, all connected by sprawling pedestrian walkways.

Officials say they know of no credible threats against a Grand Slam event that happens to end with the men’s final on the 15th anniversar­y of 9-11. But the NYPD, which ordinarily has hundreds of officers in and around the tennis centre, plans to increase its presence this year. That’s on top of the tournament’s roughly 300 private security guards.

Layers of protection include installati­on of temporary closedcirc­uit surveillan­ce cameras, including some perched atop the 23,771-seat Arthur Ashe Stadium, along with devices to detect chemical, biological or radiation risks.

I’ve already warned people they’re going to see (extra security). And they should feel good about seeing it.

“I’ve already warned people they’re going to see it,” Rodriguez said of the extra security. “And they should feel good about seeing it.”

Rodriguez, a former NYPD detective sergeant and supervisor for the Joint Terrorism Task Force, said he meets twice a day with representa­tives from the various local and federal law enforcemen­t agencies monitoring the US Open. Sample topic: the difficulti­es of “drone mitigation.”

Such widening risks were underscore­d last year when a small drone crashed into the stands during a match — it turned out a science teacher lost control of it while flying it in a nearby park — and in 2014, when an NYPD intelligen­ce analyst told a gathering of private security directors that an al-Qaida online publicatio­n encouraged a car-bomb attack on the tournament.

Just outside the gates of the tennis centre, the NYPD will keep heavily armed officers trained to respond to terror attacks at the ready. As with other events like New Year’s Eve in Times Square, plaincloth­es officers will mix with the crowds.

Other defences include strict screening checkpoint­s for the throng of spectators. In the past decade, the U.S. Open became among the first sporting events to prohibit backpacks and use airport-style, walk-through metal detectors instead of less-reliable wands to check people for weapons.

The event also has a rigorous inspection system for the more than 1,600 trucks that make deliveries during the event.

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