Shanghai Daily

Chaos ahead of Australian Open

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UP to 600 players and support staff connected to the Australian Open will have to isolate until they have been tested for COVID-19 after a hotel quarantine worker in Melbourne returned a positive result for the virus yesterday.

Play at the six warm-up events for the Grand Slam at Melbourne Park was heavily disrupted with organizers Tennis Australia cancelling all matches for today.

“Those associated with the AO who quarantine­d at the hotel now need to be tested and isolate until they receive a negative test result,” the organizers of the February 8-21 Grand Slam said in a statement. “We will work with everyone involved to facilitate testing as quickly as possible. There will be no matches at Melbourne Park on Thursday. An update on the schedule for Friday will be announced later.”

Victoria State Premier Daniel Andrews said the positive case should not impact the Australian Open itself and testing of contacts will start from today.

“There is a number of about 500, 600 people who are players and officials and others who are casual contacts,” Andrews said at a news conference late yesterday.

Victoria, of which Melbourne is the capital, reintroduc­ed the compulsory wearing of masks in indoor public places from today while private gatherings were reduced from 30 people to 15.

About 1,200 players, coaching staff and officials arrived in Australia at the middle of last month for the year’s first Grand Slam and went into a mandatory 14-day isolation.

The players were allowed five hours outside for training but 72 of them were confined to hotel rooms for the two weeks after passengers on three charter flights taking them to Australia tested positive to the novel coronaviru­s.

Participan­ts of the Australian Open

were given the green light to begin exiting COVID-19 quarantine from the end of last week with most of them involved at the ATP, WTA events at the site of the hardcourt major.

COVID-19 Quarantine Victoria said in a statement that a man, who worked his last shift at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Melbourne on Friday, returned a positive result yesterday.

“We are contacting all Australian Open players, officials and support staff who were staying at the Grand Hyatt during the entire period,” said CQV, the government agency overseeing the quarantine of participan­ts ahead of the Grand Slam.

“At this stage there is no impact on the tournament proper,” Andrews added. “I must say (the Australian Open) is important to us but the issues are much broader and that is about public health and public safety.

“This is one case. There’s no need for people to panic. There’s no need for

people to be alarmed.”

Earlier, Victoria health officials announced the state had gone 28 days without a case involving local transmissi­on.

Australia has 909 deaths attributed to COVID-19, including 820 in Victoria state. Most of those were during a second deadly wave last year when a hard lockdown and overnight curfews were put in place in Melbourne.

Just hours before the government’s announceme­nt about the positive test, 23-time major champion Serena Williams beat Tsvetana Pironkova 6-1, 6-4 to advance to the quarterfin­als of the Yarra River Classic.

Williams will next face Danielle Collins, who upset third-seeded Karolina Pliskova 7-6 (5), 7-6 (3), and could reach a semifinal match against Ashleigh Barty. The top-ranked Barty beat No. 52-ranked Marie Bouzkova in three sets and will next play Shelby Rogers.

 ??  ?? Serena Williams returns to Bulgaria’s Tsvetana Pironkova during their Yarra Valley Classic third-round match in Melbourne yesterday. The American won 6-1, 6-4. — AFP
Serena Williams returns to Bulgaria’s Tsvetana Pironkova during their Yarra Valley Classic third-round match in Melbourne yesterday. The American won 6-1, 6-4. — AFP

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