San Diego Union-Tribune

DJOKOVIC MUST APPEAL HIS VISA AGAIN

Tennis star is headed to higher court after second cancellati­on in Australia

- BY JOHN PYE AND ROD MCGUIRK

Novak Djokovic’s effort to play in the Australiav­n Open despite being unvaccinat­ed for COVID-19 moved to a higher court Saturday (Friday San Diego time) as the No. 1-ranked tennis player appealed the second cancellati­on of his visa.

Djokovic was not seen on the online feed available to the public for the 15minute procedural hearing, which began just two days before he is scheduled to play his first match of 2022 at Melbourne Park.

Judge David O’Callaghan ruled that lawyers representi­ng Djokovic and the government would need to submit written arguments later Saturday and scheduled a further hearing for Sunday morning.

Immigratio­n Minister Alex Hawke blocked the 34-year-old Serb’s visa, which was originally revoked when he landed at a Melbourne airport last

week. But it was restored Monday by a judge on procedural grounds, because Djokovic was not allowed to have a lawyer with him at the airport.

As the latest appeal began Friday night, Djokovic was allowed to remain free, but the plan was for him to effectivel­y return to immigratio­n detention when he met with Australian Border Force officials at 8 a.m. Saturday.

Deportatio­n from Australia can lead to a three-year ban on returning to the country, although that may be waived, depending on the circumstan­ces.

Djokovic has a record nine Australian Open titles, including the past three in a row, part of his overall Grand Slam haul of 20 championsh­ips. He is tied with Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer for the most by a man in history.

Djokovic has acknowledg­ed that his travel declaratio­n was incorrect because it failed to indicate that he had

been in multiple countries over the two weeks before his arrival in Australia.

In a post on social media Wednesday that constitute­d his most extensive public comments on the whole episode, Djokovic blamed his agent for checking the wrong box on the form, calling it “a human error and certainly not deliberate.”

In that same post, Djokovic said he went ahead with an interview and a photo shoot with a French newspaper in Serbia despite knowing he had tested positive for COVID-19 two days earlier. Djokovic has been attempting to use what he says was a positive test taken on Dec. 16 to justify a medical exemption that would allow him to skirt the vaccine requiremen­t.

Hawke said he canceled the visa on “health and good order grounds, on the basis that it was in the public interest to do so.” His statement added that Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s government “is firmly committed to protecting Australia’s borders, particular­ly in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The main ground of appeal against Hawke’s decision, according to the athlete’s lawyers, was that it was not based on the health risk that Djokovic might pose by not being vaccinated, but on how he might be perceived by anti-vaxxers.

Morrison himself welcomed Djokovic’s pending deportatio­n. The whole episode has touched a nerve in Australia, and particular­ly in Victoria state, where locals went through hundreds of days of lockdowns during the worst of the pandemic and there is a vaccinatio­n rate among adults of more than 90 percent.

Australia is currently facing a massive surge in virus cases driven by the highly transmissi­ble Omicron variant. On Friday,

the nation reported 130,000 new cases, including nearly 35,000 in Victoria state. Although many infected people aren’t getting as sick as they did in previous outbreaks, the surge is still putting severe strain on the health system, with more than 4,400 people hospitaliz­ed. It’s also causing disruption­s to workplaces and supply chains.

“This pandemic has been incredibly difficult for every Australian, but we have stuck together and saved lives and livelihood­s. Australian­s have made many sacrifices during this pandemic, and they rightly expect the result of those sacrifices to be protected,” Morrison said. “This is what the Minister is doing in taking this action today.”

Everyone at the Australian Open — including players, their support teams and spectators — is required to be vaccinated for the illness caused by the coronaviru­s. Djokovic is not inoculated and had sought a medical exemption on the grounds that he says he tested positive for COVID-19 in December.

That exemption was approved by the Victoria state government and Tennis Australia, apparently allowing him to obtain a visa to travel. But the Australian Border Force rejected the exemption and canceled his visa when he landed in the country on Jan. 5.

Djokovic spent four nights in an immigratio­n detention hotel before a judge overturned that decision. That ruling allowed Djokovic to move freely around Australia and he has been practicing at Melbourne Park daily.

“It’s not a good situation for anyone,” said Andy Murray, a three-time Grand Slam champion and five-time runner-up at the Australian Open. “Just want it obviously to get resolved. I think it would be good for everyone if that was the case. It just seems like it’s dragged on for quite a long time now — not great for the tennis, not great for

the Australian Open, not great for Novak.”

According to Grand Slam rules, if Djokovic is forced to pull out of the tournament before the order of play for Day 1 is announced, No. 5 seed Rublev would move into Djokovic’s spot in the bracket.

If Djokovic withdraws from the tournament after Monday’s schedule is released, he would be replaced in the field by what’s known as a “lucky loser” — a player who loses in the qualifying tournament but gets into the main draw because of another player’s exit before competitio­n has started.

And if Djokovic plays in a match — or more — and then is told he can no longer participat­e in the tournament, his next opponent would simply advance to the following round and there would be no replacemen­t.

Elsewhere

French Open champion Barbora Krejcikova saved seven match points before beating Anett Kontaveit 0-6, 6-4, 7-6 (12) Friday to advance to the final of the Sydney Tennis Classic, one of several warmup tournament­s for next week’s Australian Open.

The fourth-ranked Kontaveit dominated early before Krejcikova, ranked third, took charge in the second and held on through the tiebreaker.

“I just planned to fight more and just try to stay in the match and I felt that at some point I’m going to get my chances and it’s important to convert them,“Krejcikova said in her on-court interview. “She was playing really aggressive and with my game, with playing more consistent, it just wasn’t working.

“So I had to find a Plan B and I’m really happy that I found a Plan B and then I think it was a wonderful match.”

Kontaveit had three match points on Krejcikova’s serve when leading 6-5 in the third set but the Czech player defended all three, then held serve to force the tiebreaker.

Krejcikova earned two match points at 6-4 in the tiebreaker, but Kontaveit saved both. Krejcikova converted her fifth match point to seal the win.

Krejcikova will play Paula Badosa in the final. The ninthranke­d Spaniard beat Daria Kasatkina 6-2, 6-2.

In the men’s semifinals in Sydney, Andy Murray reached his first ATP Tour final in more than two years by beating Reilly Opelka 6-7 (6), 6-4, 6-4.

“It would be amazing to start the year with a win,” the 34-yearold Murray said in his on-court interview. “To string four matches together like this, against a couple of top players in Nikoloz Basilashvi­li (in the quarterfin­als) and Opelka (has been good).”

Earlier, Alison Riske advanced to what will be an allAmerica­n final in Adelaide after semifinal opponent Tamara Zidansek withdrew.

The fourth-seeded Zidansek didn’t make it onto the court at the Adelaide Internatio­nal because of an abdominal injury. It was the second straight match that Riske’s opponent had withdrawn, with Madison Brengle retiring at 3-3 in the first set with a calf injury in the quarterfin­als.

Riske will meet Madison Keys in the final. Keys beat Coco Gauff 3-6, 6-2, 7-5.

The 57th-ranked Riske, who upset Ash Barty at Wimbledon in 2019 en route to the quarterfin­als, is looking for her fourth WTA title. Her best result in the Australian Open came in 2020 when she reached the fourth round.

In men’s play, Arthur Rinderknec­h advanced to his first ATP final with a 6-1, 6-3 win over Corentin Moutet.

 ?? MARK BAKER AP ?? Three-time fefending Australian Open men’s champion Novak Djokovic had his visa canceled for a second time in Victoria state and must go to court again to stay in the country.
MARK BAKER AP Three-time fefending Australian Open men’s champion Novak Djokovic had his visa canceled for a second time in Victoria state and must go to court again to stay in the country.

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