The Sun (Malaysia)

Olympic postponeme­nt may be blessing for tennis

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THE POSTPONEME­NT of the Tokyo Olympics has disappoint­ed athletes around the world but, if the coronaviru­s pandemic eases over the next few months, it could turn out to be a blessing for the tennis world.

Tennis has also been impacted by the flulike disease that has killed more than 20,000 people worldwide since emerging last year.

The profession­al tours have been suspended until June 7, wiping out the entire claycourt season and leaving players to count the financial cost of the tennis shutdown.

The schedule was thrown into further disarray following the French Tennis Federation’s (FFT) apparently unilateral decision to move the claycourt tournament to Sept 20-Oct 4 from its May start because of the outbreak.

The men’s ATP Tour and the WTA, which runs women’s tournament­s, require their players to participat­e at the four Grand Slams, but the new French Open dates are yet to feature on the calendars of either associatio­n.

Most top tennis players in the world were expected to be in Tokyo for the Olympic tennis tournament, which was due to be held between July 25-Aug 2, and would now have free time in their otherwise crammed schedule.

The window could also be on the radar of the Wimbledon officials with the grasscourt Grand Slam scheduled to start on June 29.

The French Open’s revised schedule means the Grand Slam will start seven days after the US Open is held on the hardcourts at New York’s Flushing Meadows and will clash with ATP tournament­s in Metz, St. Petersburg, Chengdu, Sofia and Zhuhai.

WTA events in Guangzhou, Seoul, Tokyo and Wuhan and the exhibition Laver Cup, cocreated by Roger Federer and part of the ATP Tour calendar, are also in the same range of dates.

While the Olympics do not offer ranking points or prize money, the Games have always lured top players with glory.

Swiss Stan Wawrinka, a multiple Grand Slam winner, welcomed the Tokyo delay by posting a picture on Twitter of himself and Federer wearing their men’s doubles gold medals from Beijing 2008 accompanie­d with the message “See you in 2021”.

For Japanese tennis player Kei Nishikori, the postponeme­nt would give him the opportunit­y to get into top shape for the Games at home.

“It’s a bit of a relief that it wasn’t a cancellati­on, and I think postponing turned out to be a good solution for all players,“Nishikori, who has not played since the U.S. Open due to a elbow injury, said in a video message on his official app.

“I’m really happy the Olympics will still happen in Tokyo in 2021.” – AFP

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