Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Resuming season in 2020 a tall task

Lots of hurdles to clear for global participan­ts

- By Liz Clarke

New York remains the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic, but U.S. Open officials haven’t abandoned hope of staging the Grand Slam event — even if it means moving it to the West Coast.

The possibilit­y of holding the tournament in November at Southern California’s Indian Wells Tennis Garden was raised by U.S. Tennis Associatio­n executive director Mike Dowse in an interview with Inside Tennis.

It’s among myriad scenarios for resuming pro tennis in 2020 — proposals that have been lobbed and batted down at a dizzying pace by bullish event promoters and skeptical players in recent weeks. A combinatio­n of factors particular to tennis complicate­s its resumption before the developmen­t of a vaccine or, at minimum, significan­t strides in managing the pandemic.

Tennis is a global sport, with men’s and women’s tournament­s scheduled this July through November in Europe, North America and Asia. Its athletes and officials live in all corners of the globe, which means any tournament would require massive air travel.

And it’s governed by seven entities that would have to reach consensus, including the Associatio­n of Tennis Profession­als, the Women’s Tennis Associatio­n, the Internatio­nal Tennis Federation and organizers of the two Grand Slam events remaining on the 2020 calendar, the U.S. Open and French Open.

World No. 2 Rafael Nadal said this week that he doubted tennis would resume this year and is focused instead on preparing for the Jan. 18 start of the Australian Open, the first major of 2021.

“I’m more concerned with the Australian Open than what happens later this year,” Nadal told El Pais. “2020, I see it as practicall­y lost.”

World No. 3 Dominic Thiem said as much, telling Austria’s Servus TV: “To bring all the guys together in one place is very difficult. In my eyes, the most realistic scenario is that we start again in Australia. Or with the events at the beginning of 2021.”

With Wimbledon’s cancellati­on for the first time since World War II wiping out the grass-court season, world No. 1 Novak Djokovic floated the possibilit­y of canceling the North American hard-court season (including the U.S. Open), as well, if the virus isn’t contained by August, and resuming with a deferred clay-court swing in Europe.

“There is also the option that they will cancel all the tournament­s in America and then start with clay in the autumn, maybe come to Rome in two to three months,” Djokovic told Sky Sports Italia. “Hopefully, we can start playing again.”

ESPN broadcaste­r Patrick McEnroe, who recently recovered from the virus, said he can’t see the sport resuming in 2020.

“I’ve been saying from the start, profession­al tennis will be one of the last things to come back, just because of the internatio­nal nature of the sport,” said McEnroe, who speaks from the perspectiv­e of the USTA’s former head of player developmen­t, former U.S. Davis Cup captain and a former touring pro, in a telephone interview. “Whether it’s the U.S. Open or the Marseilles Open, you have players coming from all over the world. Until the world is back to some semblance of normal, I don’t see how the game as we know it can restart.”

Though Dowse didn’t rule out playing the U.S. Open at Flushing Meadows’ Billie Jean King National Tennis Center without fans, there is little incentive to do so.

With annual revenue of nearly $350 million, the U.S. Open is the most lucrative of the four Grand Slam events. The bulk of its revenue comes from the nearly 750,000 ticket buyers who stream into the gates of the vast Flushing Meadows complex and eat, drink and gobble up souvenirs over the two-week run. That revenue, along with spending by corporate sponsors who pay for on-site signage and programmin­g to reach those spectators, dwarfs the USTA’s income from broadcast deals.

That’s what makes relocating to Indian Wells attractive. Indian Wells’ 16,100-seat stadium is the biggest tennis venue in the country next to Arthur Ashe Stadium in New York.

Chris Widmaier, managing director of corporate communicat­ions for the USTA, said earlier this week that tournament officials are studying several scenarios for staging the tournament and expect to announce a decision by mid- to late-June.

“We are modeling various scenarios, whether with limited fans or no fans on site, and what that would entail,” Widmaier said in a telephone interview. “There are a lot of unknowns in all of this modeling.”

Keeping the tournament in New York, with or without open turnstiles, appears the least likely scenario.

New York remains the epicenter of the highly contagious virus. At present, U.S. Open’s indoor practice facility is serving as a temporary hospital amid the crisis, which has outpaced capacity of the region’s hospitals.

The men’s and women’s tennis tours have been suspended since March 9 and will not resume until July 13, the day after Wimbledon was to have concluded, at the earliest. French Open officials announced earlier that they were postponing their event’s start from late May to Sept. 20.

“2020, I see it as practicall­y lost.” — Rafael Nadal

No. 2 player in world

 ?? Associated Press ?? Officials floated the idea of moving the U.S. Open from New York to California. Most of its $350 million in annual revenue comes from the nearly 750,000 people who attend the Grand Slam event over the course of two weeks, leaving little incentive to play without fans.
Associated Press Officials floated the idea of moving the U.S. Open from New York to California. Most of its $350 million in annual revenue comes from the nearly 750,000 people who attend the Grand Slam event over the course of two weeks, leaving little incentive to play without fans.
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