Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Virus looms large as first major about to start

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Easy as it is to assemble a list of significan­t Australian Open story lines, nothing hangs over the upcoming two weeks quite like questions involving the coronaviru­s.

There is, after all, still a pandemic in progress.

“During the tough months of quarantine in Spain,” said Rafael Nadal, who equaled Roger Federer at 20 majors — three ahead of Novak Djokovic — by winning the French Open in October, “[there] have been too many problems to think about tennis, no?”

And no matter how much better Australia has contained its covid-19 outbreak than countries such as the United States, a reminder of the precarious nature of a large, internatio­nal sports event came just a handful of days before the scheduled beginning of the year’s first Grand Slam tennis tournament on Monday: A full day of competitio­n at the half-dozen tuneups in Melbourne was postponed because of a positive test for a worker at a hotel

that housed 160 players in January.

The draw for the Australian Open was pushed back a day, too.

Before the 24-hour break was announced, Australian player Nick Kyrgios captured a common sentiment, tweeting: “Am I playing tomorrow?”

“It was a bit of uncertaint­y,” he said later. “I had no idea what was going on.”

Those sorts of doubts could linger at a major tournament that already was pushed back three weeks from its original start date to allow for all of the entrants and their entourages to quarantine upon arrival on the continent.

“From a tennis point of view, you cannot prepare 100%,” 2019 U.S. Open runner-up Daniil Medvedev said. “You try to do what you can.”

Williams, a seven-time champion in Melbourne, said that the Achilles tendon issue that hampered her last year in a loss at the U.S. Open and forced her to withdraw from the French Open might have prevented her from competing at all in Australia if not for that extra bit of rest.

Most participan­ts were limited to leaving their hotels for five hours of training per day. More than 70 players were banned from leaving their rooms at all during that period because they potentiall­y were exposed to the virus during the chartered flights that carried them from various spots in the globe to Melbourne.

“Everyone experience­d different challenges when it came to that period,” three-time major semifinali­st Johanna Konta said. “Some had it a lot more difficult than others, that’s for sure.”

Because of that one positive covid-19 test, more than 500 people associated with the Australian Open and its warmup tournament­s were told to isolate until they tested negative.

One day later, action resumed. Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley chalked it up as “just one of those additional challenges” and stated unequivoca­lly: “We are starting on Monday.”

“The players, from the feedback we’re getting from them … have come to accept the fact that now, with their travel around the world, the environmen­t’s different. And anything can happen,” Tiley said. “Every day you wake up, it can be different. And I think they have gotten used to that.”

The plan is to let in 30,000 spectators per day, about 50% of the usual crowds — and a big departure from the last Grand Slam tournament of 2020, the French Open, which had about 1,000 fans per day, and the U.S. Open, which did not allow any.

“There’s no such thing as no risk,” said Tiley, offering what he called a paraphrasi­ng of a government official. “There’s always going to be risk. And the objective is to minimize that as best as possible.”

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