Bangkok Post

Australian Open champ Kenin ‘happy to be travelling’ as season starts

- AFP

Defending Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin believes the tough bio-secure limits on players at the start of the 2021 season are “harsh” but says she is “happy to be travelling”.

The world No.4, who is top seed in the year-opening WTA event in Abu Dhabi which started yesterday, will be kept in a bubble along with her fellow competitor­s before they all move on to Melbourne for the delayed Australian Open, which now begins on Feb 8.

They will then be quarantine­d for two weeks when they will be allowed to leave their hotel rooms for five hours per day to train at Melbourne Park.

“It’s not the most ideal situation,” Kenin said at an online press conference on Tuesday.

“I wish we could go out and walk around the city but we can’t. It is what it is. I’m just happy to be here, I’m happy to be travelling, I’m trying to keep it as normal as possible.

“The rules are quite harsh, but it’s for everyone.”

Kenin is grateful for the additional

time she has been able to spend on court to prepare for 2021 and is happy there will at least be some fans — 20 percent capacity — allowed to attend the opening Grand Slam of the season in Melbourne.

Others, however, have been less happy with the restrictio­ns placed on the players.

“I’m hoping that this bubble life will end very soon,” said Tunisian Ons Jabeur, who is seeded 15th in Abu Dhabi.

“I’m not sure when Covid is going to be over but we want our freedom.

“We are profession­als and I think we can have the responsibi­lity to be in the tournament but also be responsibl­e at the same time.

“We don’t need this kind of restrictio­n, but what can you do? You have to accept them after all.”

A last-minute decision was made to stage a 500-level women’s tennis tournament in the UAE capital in order to give players an opportunit­y to compete before they hop on special chartered flights to Melbourne.

Players were given exemptions from Abu Dhabi’s mandatory 10-day quarantine but must adhere to strict rules limiting their movement to just the hotel and the tournament site at Zayed Sports City.

The one-off event has no sponsors and the WTA Tour is providing the US$565,530 prize pot.

By mid-January, all players participat­ing in the Australian Open will board chartered flights from three locations

— Dubai, Los Angeles and Singapore — directly to Melbourne and straight into quarantine.

For the first week, players must pair up and stick to the same practice partner, before adding two more to their closed practice group in the second week of quarantine.

“It’s a new thing, it’s a bit weird, but what can we do? Safety first,” said world No.10 Aryna Sabalenka.

USUAL SCHEDULE

The WTA Tour will follow its usual schedule for most of 2021 despite the coronaviru­s pandemic, after organisers on Tuesday announced an updated calendar, which takes the season through to Wimbledon in July.

The Indian Wells tournament, jointly held with the ATP, was postponed last month from its usual March date, while the Australian Open was delayed until Feb 8.

Top-level events, i ncluding the Miami Open, Madrid Open and Italian Open, will all go ahead as usual.

 ?? AFP ?? Sofia Kenin on her way to winning the 2020 Australian Open.
AFP Sofia Kenin on her way to winning the 2020 Australian Open.

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