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ATP Tour boss is not ruling out return to action this season

Gaudenzi: The picture will be clearer in June

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MUMBAI: Despite the growing possibilit­y of a total wipeout of profession­al tennis this year due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, ATP Tour chief Andrea Gaudenzi is refusing to give up on 2020 just yet.

The tennis season was suspended in early March due to the Covid-19 outbreak, and the hiatus will continue at least until mid-July with many countries in lockdown to contain the virus.

Wimbledon has been cancelled and the French Open postponed from its usual May start to September, while the status of the US Open, scheduled to take place in late August, is still unclear.

Many people, including 19-time Grand Slam winner Rafa Nadal, have voiced doubts about whether the sport can return in 2020 because players would need to travel around the world to compete in tournament­s.

“It would be unwise to call it quits now,” Gaudenzi told Reuters. “Nobody knows what will happen, we want to keep an optimistic overview.

“Obviously, there could be a subset of options, which is playing with closed gates or deciding how to deal with travel restrictio­ns. But we have not made these decisions so far because they are all hypothetic­al scenarios.”

The tour is working on a time frame of six to eight weeks to decide on tournament­s.

“We have set a deadline of May 15 for the tournament­s in July, post Wimbledon,” said the Italian, who reached a career-high singles ranking of 18. And June 1 for the tournament­s in August.

“So we are, in principle, dealing it on I would say six to eight weeks in advance in time for making a decision. Longer than that, it would be foolish to make decisions in my opinion.”

The United States Tennis Associatio­n (USTA) is in charge of the US Open, scheduled to run from Aug 31-Sept 13 on the hardcourts of New York.

“Their announceme­nt might be a little bit later, we don’t know,” Gaudenzi said.

“Once we get to the beginning of June, we will probably know more about the US summer.”

At the 2019 US Open, Spain’s Nadal won the men’s title and Canada’s Bianca Andreescu took the women’s crown.

While profession­al football leagues around Europe are gearing up for a return to action, internatio­nal travel restrictio­ns make it tougher for tennis to restart.

“You can have an estimate that it’s going to be fairly difficult and unlikely that all these countries will align to one single policy relating to travel restrictio­ns,” Gaudenzi said.

“Australia today for example is probably in a completely different phase than the United Kingdom. You look at Sweden, they have taken a completely different approach. So we could play a tournament in Sweden probably today. But can we travel 100 players to Sweden today? No. So that’s the challenge.”

The ATP and the WTA, which runs the women’s circuit, recently joined forces with the Internatio­nal Tennis Federation (ITF) and the boards of the four Grand Slam tournament­s to raise over US$6 million to help lower-level players affected by the shutdown.

Roger Federer recently called for a merger between the governing bodies, and both Gaudenzi and his WTA counterpar­t Steve Simon welcomed the suggestion.

“It was a great effort,” said Gaudenzi, who took over as ATP chairman in January.

“I hope it’s just the beginning of a future productive collaborat­ion which is much needed in our sport if we want to grow and become one of the best.

“I am very pleased with the outcome. I think it’s a great message, very healthy that everybody joined in to help the players who needed the most in this very difficult time.”

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 ?? AFP ?? Canada’s Bianca Andreescu poses with the US Open trophy at the Top of the Rock at Rockefelle­r Center in New York last year.
AFP Canada’s Bianca Andreescu poses with the US Open trophy at the Top of the Rock at Rockefelle­r Center in New York last year.

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