Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Nadal not thrilled at prospect of travel

Spanish star has doubts about NYC

- By Christophe­r Clarey

Traditiona­lly, this is Rafael Nadal’s time to dominate — the week when the world’s premier clay-court tennis tournament, the French Open, comes to a close, and when Nadal secures another singles title.

He has won the Open an astounding 12 times, but this is a season like no other, and instead of pumping his fist and bellowing “vamos” after whipping another forehand winner in Paris, he instead spent this week at his academy in Manacor on the Spanish island of Majorca.

The French Open, originally scheduled to run May 24-June 7, has been postponed to late September and early October because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The U.S. Open, the next Grand Slam tournament on the schedule, is uncertain to be played but still set for Aug. 31Sept. 13 in New York, which has been hit particular­ly hard by the virus.

“Well, is not an ideal situation, honestly no,” said Nadal, who won his fourth U.S. Open singles title last year. “If you ask me today if I want to travel today to New York to play a tennis tournament, I will say no, I will not.

“In a couple of months I don’t know how the situation is going to improve. Hopefully it’s going to improve the right way, and I’m sure the people who organize the event, the USTA, want a safe event, same like the French Federation,” Nadal told tennis journalist­s on a Zoom call.

The men’s and women’s tennis tours have been on hold since mid-March, when the BNP

Paribas Open in Indian Wells, Calif., was canceled on the eve of the qualifying tournament. Nadal and his team already were in Indian Wells.

He returned to Majorca and spent more than two months in lockdown before resuming limited on-court training in May. Spain, which is beginning to reopen, has been hit hard by the pandemic, with more than 240,000 confirmed cases and approximat­ely 30,000 deaths.

Though tennis exhibition­s are being organized in Europe and the United States, the tours have postponed play until at least August with a decision expected later this month on the U.S. Open.

United States Tennis Associatio­n officials have expressed cautious optimism. It would very likely be played without spectators and with players limited to reduced support teams and subject to frequent testing, with their movements restricted to official hotels and the tournament site to protect their health.

“I am confident they will make the right decision in the right moment to make sure if the tournament is played, it will be in safe circumstan­ces,” Nadal said. “If not, in my opinion, it doesn’t make sense.”

Nadal said it was too early to decide whether he would play in both the U.S. Open and the French Open, which are likely to be separated by just a two-week gap if they are played at all.

“We have a worldwide tour,” he said. “We need to be clear. We need to be responsibl­e. We need to be sending a strong message, and we need to be a positive example for the society. We need to understand we are suffering an unpreceden­ted situation, and my feeling is, we need to come back when all the players from all the countries of the world are able to travel and in safe circumstan­ces.”

But Nadal conceded that he might have to compromise on that principle and “probably will play” if the tour restarts with some competitor­s’ movements still restricted.

“But my feeling will be that we are not being 100% correct,” he said. “And I want to see my sport being 100% fair and correct especially under these circumstan­ces.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? Rafael Nadal celebrates his 11th French Open title in 2018. This year’s tournament had been scheduled to conclude this weekend.
Associated Press Rafael Nadal celebrates his 11th French Open title in 2018. This year’s tournament had been scheduled to conclude this weekend.

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