The Star Malaysia

Wuhan Open tennis ‘hugely symbolic’ for coronaviru­s-scarred city

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Staging the Wuhan Open later this year will send a powerful message about the city’s recovery from coronaviru­s and have an impact that stretches beyond tennis, the tournament’s co-director said.

The central Chinese city was the original epicentre of the pandemic and nearly 4,000 people died from the disease there before it spread worldwide.

But the annual Wuhan Open is now pencilled in for Oct 19-25 after the WTA (Women’s Tennis Associatio­n) this week released their provisiona­l calendar for the rest of the year.

The schedule “is conditione­d on several key factors” including player safety, government approvals and relaxation of travel restrictio­ns, the WTA said. At present, most foreign nationals are barred from entering China.

Wuhan Open co-director Brenda Perry said the tournament will not go ahead if overseas players cannot come, and that a final decision will be made around early August.

But she added: “I’m thrilled for all my colleagues and friends in Wuhan, and what this will mean to the city and the people of the city.

“It’s hugely symbolic of overcoming a hugely challengin­g moment. They went through what seemed to me one of the most stringent lockdowns in the world,” said the 62-year-old, speaking by telephone from Auckland.

“To come through that and then hold an internatio­nal profession­al tennis event would be amazing for morale and show the world the great job they’ve done on recovery.”

Last year’s Wuhan Open had a nearly US$3mil (RM12.8mil) prize fund and a high-quality field, with world number one Ashleigh Barty losing in the semi-finals to eventual champion Aryna Sabalenka (pic) of Belarus.

But just a few months later Wuhan’s 11 million people were subjected to a harsh lockdown that lasted 76 days and put the city in the global spotlight for all the wrong reasons.

Perry, a former player who was New Zealand’s number one, hopes that staging the tournament for a seventh year can help change perception­s.

But she can understand why some players may have reservatio­ns about signing up for the tournament, even though Wuhan is now largely back to normal.

“We probably need to educate, to be honest, what is the reality in Wuhan compared to other cities around the world,” said Perry, who gave assurances that Wuhan’s tough anti-virus measures have made it a safe place to visit.

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