The Scottish Mail on Sunday

MEDVEDEV IS NEW No 1 AS ROW OVER RANKING POINTS RUMBLES ON...

- By Mike Dickson

NOTHING sums up the chaos of Wimbledon’s ranking statement more than the elevation to world No 1 it will bring for Daniil Medvedev.

With the law of unintended consequenc­es kicking into action, a measure initially designed to hurt Russia will now see their main man Medvedev (pictured) all but guaranteed to replace Novak Djokovic at the top after The Championsh­ips.

That will be one part of the fallout from the decision by the tours to cut SW19 out of its ranking system this year. The 35-year-old Serb being unable to defend his 2,000 points from winning 12 months ago is the reason.

As an opponent of the All England Club’s stance Djokovic can hardly complain, and the sanction will doubtless not deter him from trying to claim another Slam in his race with Rafael Nadal for the most majors.

Many other players, from the great to the anonymous, will suffer consequenc­es. Roger Federer, missing anyway, will lose his ranking altogether. So too Serena Williams unless she played beforehand (it looks increasing­ly unlikely she will play at all).

Spare a thought for Italy’s Matteo Berrettini, who cannot recoup the 1,200 he made at Wimbledon last year by making the final.

There will be further recriminat­ions over the next month following Friday night’s confirmati­on. A further summation of the splits in tennis is that four different bodies — the two tours, Internatio­nal Tennis Federation and Wimbledon — all made separate announceme­nts within an hour. Beyond the formality of the statements there has been a serious deteriorat­ion in the relationsh­ip between the two tours and the All England Club. Tour officials have been privately astonished at what they see as a lack of communicat­ion around the whole matter of the Russian ban, and the lack of presence at events in recent months of figures from Wimbledon and the Lawn Tennis Associatio­n.

For their part the British side insist that they kept the rest of the game up to speed with their position as much as they could. Either way, the various parties did not connect very well.

Not having points is ultimately galling for a tournament which had to cope with Covid disruption last year and was, uniquely among the Slams, outright cancelled in 2020. There is a certain solidarity among the biggest four tournament­s and looking on with interest will be the US Open, which may take a similar line to Wimbledon if there is no upturn in the wretched events affecting Ukraine.

The French Open will plough on blissfully aware as it begins with its usual Sunday start to maximise ticket revenue. The main attraction on day one will be the appearance of Carlos Alcaraz, the 19-year-old Spaniard who ought to have a gentle introducti­on against Argentinia­n Juan Ignacio Londero.

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