New York Post

U.S. Open COVID-19 plan in works

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Charter flights to ferry U.S. Open tennis players and limited entourages from Europe, South America and the Middle East to New York. Negative COVID-19 tests before traveling. Centralize­d housing. Daily temperatur­e checks.

No spectators. Fewer oncourt officials. No lockerroom access on practice days.

All are among the scenarios being considered for the 2020 U.S. Open — if it is held at all amid the coronaviru­s pandemic — and described to The Associated Press by a high-ranking official at the Grand Slam tournament.

“All of this is still fluid,” Stacey Allaster, the U.S. Tennis Associatio­n’s chief executive for profession­al tennis, said in a telephone interview Saturday. “We have made no decisions at all.”

With that caveat, Allaster added that if the USTA board does decide to go forward with the Open, she expects it to be held at its usual site and in its usual spot on the calendar. The main draw is scheduled to start Aug. 31.

“We continue to be, I would say, 150 percent focused on staging a safe environmen­t for conducting a U.S. Open at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York on our dates. It’s all I wake up — our team wakes up — thinking about,” Allaster said. “The idea of an alternativ­e venue, an alternativ­e date ... we’ve got a responsibi­lity to explore it, but it doesn’t have a lot of momentum.”

An announceme­nt should come from “mid-June to end of June,” Allaster said.

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