Porterville Recorder

When tennis returns: No fans, less prize money, rustiness

- By HOWARD FENDRICH AP Tennis Writer

Madison Keys, the 2017 U.S. Open runnerup, has not played a real tennis match since January, so she was thrilled when a partial schedule was released for the sport’s true return after its coronaviru­s-forced hiatus.

“Halfway through the year, we’re (usually) all kind of thinking, ‘Oh, I’d love some weeks at home. Been on the road for so long. Those pressure moments in matches are so stressful’ and all of that,” said Keys, one of 16 women in an exhibition event in Charleston, South Carolina, next week. “And now we’re all like, ‘Please put me on a center court, breakpoint down in the third, because I would love to have that feeling again.’”

Now that there is a plan in place for toplevel tennis to resume — starting in August in Italy, then Washington, with Grand Slam action to follow in New York, then Paris, assuming the COVID-19 outbreak allows — it’s time to consider ways in which the sport will look different.

There won’t be fans at the U.S. Open or likely anywhere else at the outset. Players will be vying for decreased

creased prize money, with as much as a 40% cut at the biggest non-major tournament­s. U.S. Open matches on all but two courts will have a chair umpire aided by electronic line-calling, not line judges.

There surely will be rustiness for players after such long layoffs. Could be a string of athletes getting hurt, too, if recent exhibition­s are any indication.

“I don’t think many of us -- outside of having an injury, maybe -- have gone this long without that level of competitio­n,” said Keys, an American currently ranked No. 13.

“It’s really difficult to keep practicing when you don’t really have a goal in mind,” Keys said. “So being able to have some of these tournament­s back on the calendar has been really great, even just for my mentality -- just because I know I’m working for something.”

There are remaining unknowns and adjustment­s could take place before anyone swings a racket at Flushing Meadows.

“For me, everything seems like it’s going to be different at the Open -- and at all these tournament­s. No fans. What’s the locker room situation? Where’s food? Transport? There’s just so many questions. And it’s not going to be like any other year, any other tournament, that we’ve played before,” said Bethanie Mattek-sands, who’s won nine women’s or mixed doubles Slam titles and, like Keys, is playing in Charleston. “For me, personally, I don’t think all the questions are answered to my satisfacti­on.”

 ?? AP PHOTO BY FRANK FRANKLIN II ?? In this Sept. 5, 2018, file photo, Madison Keys celebrates after defeating Carla Suarez Navarro, of Spain, in the quarterfin­als of the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York.
AP PHOTO BY FRANK FRANKLIN II In this Sept. 5, 2018, file photo, Madison Keys celebrates after defeating Carla Suarez Navarro, of Spain, in the quarterfin­als of the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York.

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