The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

So many events in Melbourne, until COVID disrupted the plan

- By John Pye

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA » Erima Nishimura sure picked a decent day to bring her 9-year-old son, Yoshiharu, to Melbourne Park for the first time to see some tennis.

So much tennis: There were 89 matches on the schedule Wednesday, featuring Serena Williams, Naomi Osaka, Stan Wawrinka and eight other Grand Slam singles champions.

It’s all part of a sixtournam­ent setup meant to help players who had to spend 14 days in hotel quarantine prepare in short order amid a pandemic for the Australian Open — yes, a half-dozen tournament­s, and all held at one site, the venue where the year’s first Grand Slam event begins on Monday.

“I feel like things are coming back to somewhat normal,” said Sofia Kenin, the defending Australian Open champion, who won a three-setter Wednesday that was part of the Yarra Valley Classic. “It’s obviously nice to see a lot of matches.”

Things got more complicate­d later Wednesday, when the state government announced that a worker at one of the tournament’s three Melbourne quarantine hotels had tested positive for COVID-19. That meant any players, coaches or officials who quarantine­d at the Grand Hyatt would have to isolate until they returned a negative test for the virus.

Tennis Australia responded by calling off all play at the tuneup tournament­s scheduled for Thursday.

Things had been going smoothly, with health authoritie­s reporting earlier Wednesday that Melbourne hadn’t had any locally transmitte­d COVID-19 cases for weeks.

Nishimura, who is from Tokyo and moved to Melbourne 18 months ago, and Yoshiharu got to see Osaka, who collected one of her three Grand Slam trophies at Melbourne in 2019, beat Katie Boulter 3-6, 6-3, 6-1 on Margaret Court Arena.

“This Australian Open is very happy for all people living in Melbourne, I think,” said Nishimura, who bought tickets especially to see Osaka play and then waited in a small group of fans above the player exit to collect a special memento. “This is the first time I’ve seen her play — have only seen her on television. Now we’ve got her autograph.”

Even Osaka herself said she planned to head out to the courts to sit in the stands and watch others play.

“I just feel like this whole situation is a bit unusual,” Osaka said, “because we’re at the Australian Open — like, where it’s being held, but we’re not playing it quite yet.”

As well as three WTA tournament­s, there’s the 12-team ATP Cup, featuring top-ranked Novak Djokovic, No. 2 Rafael Nadal and most of the top 10 players, and two other ATP events going on this week.

That’s a lot of tennis players and their entourage to transport, feed and to ensure adequate social distancing.

For some, the glut of tennis at Melbourne Park has the vibe of majors in times gone by — before a Grand Slam stadium had a retractabl­e roof — when rain washed out play and those matches had to be crammed onto different days. For others, like British player Dan Evans, it felt like going back to junior tournament­s, when it was the norm for multiple competitio­ns to run concurrent­ly.

“They have obviously done a great job to get so many playing opportunit­ies out there. The beauty of this is, if you lose ... you can just go straight back out and prepare — you’ve not going to travel anywhere,” he said. “Obviously practice courts are not ideal right now, but there’s plenty off-site.”

And there’s fans — something fresh to the mix for players who’ve become used to playing to empty stands in the COVID-19 pandemic.

Capacity has been capped at 25% this week, allowing some extra space for the players to play and practice, something they’ve sorely missed while spending two weeks in hotel quarantine. It’s expected to rise to 50% for the Australian Open.lished, broadcast, rewritten or redistribu­ted without permission.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States