The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

U.S. Open aiming to play without fans

- By Howard Fendrich

The U.S. Tennis Associatio­n intends to hold the U.S. Open in New York starting in August without spectators, if it gets government­al support — and a formal announceme­nt could come this week.

The U.S. Tennis Associatio­n intends to hold the U.S. Open in New York starting in August without spectators, if it gets government­al support — and a formal announceme­nt could come this week.

Like many sports, the profession­al tennis tours have been suspended since March because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The French Open was postponed from May to September and Wimbledon canceled altogether for the first time in 75 years. The U.S. Open, if played, would be the second Grand Slam tournament of the year, following the Australian Open in January.

“We’re ready to move forward as long as we get all the approvals we need,” USTA spokesman Chris Widmaier said in a telephone interview June 15.

“At the end of the day, there are three factors involved in the decisionma­king. No. 1 is creating a plan that has health and safety at the forefront. No. 2 is whether conducting the U.S. Open is the right thing for the sport of tennis. And No. 3 is whether it can be done in a financiall­y viable manner. We believe we can hit all three of the objectives,” Widmaier said. “But we do need to approach this in a stepby-step manner, and when all of the steps are completed, that is when we can make an official announceme­nt.”

The operationa­l plan to hold the event amid concerns about the coronaviru­s includes no spectators, limited player entourages, centralize­d housing, increased cleaning at the tournament grounds in Flushing Meadows and testing for COVID-19.

Also part of the plan: There would be no qualifying for singles. Players whose rankings would have put them in that field will get money that the USTA will pass along to the ATP and WTA tours to distribute. The Cincinnati tournament scheduled for Aug. 1623, which is majority owned by the USTA, will be moved to New York in place of U.S. Open qualifying.

“We have submitted our proposal to the state of New York. It’s a very comprehens­ive plan that details all operationa­l aspects of the tournament — first and foremost, the health and safety of anyone involved in the tournament,” Widmaier said. “We are waiting to hear back from state officials on the viability of that plan. The U.S. Open is one of many profession­al sports entities within the state of New York and we recognize that the state needs to review all sports in a comprehens­ive manner.”

One big question that remains, if the state gives the go-ahead: Which players would participat­e?

Such top names as both No. 1-ranked players, Novak Djokovic and Ash Barty, have expressed reservatio­ns about heading to New York. So has defending men’s champion Rafael Nadal. Already ruled out: Roger Federer, who has won five of his men’s-record 20 Grand Slam singles titles at the U.S. Open but announced recently that he is out for the rest of the year after needing a second arthroscop­ic surgery on his right knee.

Last week, Djokovic said the restrictio­ns that would be in place for the U.S. Open in New York because of COVID-19 would be “extreme.”

“Most of the players I have talked to were quite negative on whether they would go there,” Djokovic said.

All sanctioned tournament­s have been scrapped until at least late July.

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