The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Tennis tours stop until June for COVID-19; rankings frozen

- By Howard Fendrich

The ATP and WTA profession­al tennis tours suspended all competitio­n through at least June 7 because of the new coronaviru­s pandemic and froze their rankings Wednesday “until further notice.”

In a rare joint statement by the men’s and women’s tours, they announced that the entire clay-court circuit “will not be held as scheduled” — a day after the start of the French Open, also played on that surface, was postponed from May to September.

The French tennis federation’s go-it-alone decision to pick new dates and reschedule the beginning of its clay-court Grand Slam tournament for one week after the end of the hardcourt U.S. Open in New York prompted some shade from the fractured sport’s other governing bodies.

“Now is not a time to act unilateral­ly, but in unison,” the ATP-WTA statement said. “All decisions related to the impact of the coronaviru­s require appropriat­e consultati­on and review with the stakeholde­rs in the game.”

It went on to say that is “a view that is shared by” the ATP, WTA, Internatio­nal Tennis Federation and the groups that run the U.S. Open, Wimbledon and Australian Open — the three non-French Grand Slam tournament­s.

For most people, COVID-19 causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia.

The vast majority of people recover from the new virus. According to the World Health Organizati­on, people with mild illness recover in about two weeks, while those with more severe illness may take three to six weeks to recover.

As of now, the next major championsh­ip on the tennis calendar is Wimbledon, which is scheduled to start in England on June 29.

Its organizers and those in charge of the U.S. Open, which is slated to begin on Aug. 31, have said they are not yet ready to make any changes to their tournament­s but are studying the matter.

Shortly after the ATPWTA announceme­nt, the the ITF put a halt to its lower-tier events until June 7.

The tours said last week they would suspend play until late April or early May.

The tournament­s affected by Wednesday’s moves include combined men’s and women’s events in Madrid and Rome.

Also being scrapped are upcoming WTA tournament­s in Strasbourg, France, and Rabat, Morocco, along with ATP events in Munich; Estoril, Portugal; Geneva; and Lyon, France.

With players unable to add points by winning matches, they won’t lose them now, either, so will hold their current spots in the ATP and WTA rankings until June — and possibly beyond.

The rankings of June 8, which was supposed to be the day after the French Open concluded, were going to be the cutoff to help determine qualificat­ion for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. It is not known whether that will change.

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