The Day

Three more COVID-19 cases linked to Australian Open arrivals

- By DENNIS PASSA

Two players are among the three latest COVID-19 cases that have emerged from testing conducted on passengers who arrived on charter flights bringing people to Melbourne for the Australian Open.

Tournament director Craig Tiley said the players weren't considered to be contagious, though, and hadn't been taken out of the regular quarantine hotels.

The first six positive tests were reported over the weekend and connected to flights from Los Angeles, Abu Dhabi and Doha, Qatar.

All passengers on those flights, including 72 elite tennis players, were classified by local health authoritie­s as close contacts of people infected with the coronaviru­s and forced into hard lockdown. That means they're not allowed to leave their hotel rooms for the mandatory 14-day quarantine period. The six infected people, including a member of the aircrew on one flight and two coaches on different flights, were transferre­d to a medical hotel.

The Victoria state government announced three new positive tests on Tuesday, the first to involve players.

The Australian Associated Press quoted Tiley as saying the health department “will need to confirm that they are viral shedding but I can tell you that they're not in the medical hotel.”

Tennis Australia declined to provide The Associated Press with a list of the 72 affected players, but many have made their status known via posts on social media.

Scheduled to start on Feb. 8

More than 1,200 players, coaches, staff, officials and media arrived on flights in a 36-hour period until Saturday morning to prepare for the Australian Open, which starts Feb. 8.

Victoria state Premier Daniel Andrews said some of the cases linked to the tournament will be reclassifi­ed as “non-infectious shedding."

But the state's chief medical officer, Brett Sutton, later said the reclassifi­cation was unlikely to mean any of the 72 players in lockdown — meaning they're not allowed to leave their rooms for daily practice sessions like the broader player group — could leave isolation early.

All people traveling to Australia for the tennis tournament had to return a negative test before boarding the charter flights, although there was at least one exemption in the case of the historic shedding.

Tennys Sandgren, a two-time quarterfin­alist at Melbourne Park, originally tested positive for the coronaviru­s in November and the Victoria state health authoritie­s determined after reviewing the American player's medical records that he was no longer contagious, although still shedding viral particles. So he was given approval to fly to Australia last week.

“My two tests were less than 8 weeks apart. I was sick in November, totally healthy now,” Sandgren wrote on Twitter. “There's not a single documented case where I would be contagious at this point. Totally recovered!”

Some players have used social media to detail their perceived hardships of being in lockdown, some saying they weren't aware of the strict quarantine regulation­s.

“These are high performing athletes and it is hard to keep a high performing athlete in a room,” Tiley said. “This is the contributi­on that they have to make in order to get the privilege of when they do come out to compete for $80 million ($62 million) in prize money."

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