Business Day

Fans may have to watch French Open on television

- Agency Staff Paris /AFP

French tennis chief Bernard Guidicelli says that Roland Garros, already controvers­ially pushed back four months due to the coronaviru­s, could be staged behind closed doors.

Guidicelli, who said the French Tennis Federation had “no regrets” over its unilateral decision to move the clay court Grand Slam from May 24-June 7 to September 20-October 4, said all options remained on the table.

“We haven’t ruled out any option. Roland Garros is first and foremost a story of matches and players,” he told the Journal du Dimanche. “There is the tournament taking place in the stadium, and the tournament on TV screens.

“Millions of viewers around the world are waiting.

“Organising it behind closed doors would allow part of the business model — television rights [which account for more than a third of the tournament’s revenues] — to go ahead. This cannot be overlooked.”

The spread of the coronaviru­s has halted all tennis since mid-March and will not resume until July 13 at the earliest.

Wimbledon has already been cancelled for the first time since World War 2. The US Open, due to take place in New York from August 31-September 13, is also in question with a decision expected in mid-June.

Almost 500,000 fans regularly attend Roland Garros annually. However, an indication of the thinking around the 2020 edition came on Thursday when the French federation decided to reimburse all tickets bought for the original date of the tournament rather than transfer them.

Guidicelli admitted that the start of the reschedule­d French Open could even be pushed back a further week to begin on

September 27. That would allow a two-week break between the US Open and Roland Garros.

He is adamant that the French federation was right to shift the tournament back by four months with the death toll from the coronaviru­s in the country standing at 26,310 by Saturday night.

“Roland Garros is the driving force of tennis in France, it is what feeds the players in our ecosystem,” added Guidicelli, describing himself as the “good father”. “We think of them first, protecting them. We made a courageous choice and today, no-one regrets it.

“A tournament without a date is a boat without a rudder — we don’t know where we’re going. We positioned ourselves as far in the calendar as possible, anxious not to harm major events, so that no Masters 1000 or any Grand Slam would be affected. The turn of events seems to have proved us right.”

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