National Post

Australian Open to go ahead despite players’ quarantine anger

- IAN RANSOM

MELBOURNE • Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley has confirmed the year’s first Grand Slam will go ahead on Feb. 8 despite anger from players forced into hard quarantine in Melbourne due to positive COVID-19 cases on their charter planes.

Seventy-two players and their entourages have to isolate for two weeks in their hotel rooms in Melbourne and are no longer able to leave them to train after infections were reported on three flights carrying them to Melbourne.

A positive case was reported late on Sunday from the third flight that landed a day earlier and had ferried 58 passengers from Doha, where the Grand Slam’s qualifiers were held.

Twenty-five players were on board but the passenger, who tested negative before the flight, is not a player.

“The 25 players on the flight will not be able to leave their hotel room for 14 days and until they are medically cleared. They will not be eligible for practice,” the Australian Open said in a statement.

Other players who arrived in different planes are also undertakin­g a mandatory 14day quarantine but are permitted to leave their hotels for five hours a day to train, raising questions about the integrity of the Grand Slam.

Tiley said the tournament would start as scheduled but governing body Tennis Australia would look at altering the lead-up tournament­s to help affected players.

“We are reviewing the schedule leading in to see what we can do to assist these players,” Tiley told the Nine Network on Sunday.

“The Australian Open is going ahead and we will continue to do the best we possibly can do to ensure those players have the best opportunit­y.”

Earlier, quarantine authoritie­s said they had recorded a fourth COVID-19 infection among the passengers on the two charter flights carrying players to Melbourne.

A broadcaste­r on the flight from Los Angeles had tested positive, adding to an aircrew member and a tennis coach on the same plane.

The other case was Sylvain Bruneau, the coach of Canadian Bianca Andreescu, the 2019 U.S. Open champion. Bruneau was a passenger on a charter carrying 23 players from Abu Dhabi.

COVID-19 Quarantine Victoria boss Emma Cassar said authoritie­s had provided consistent advice.

“The rules for close contacts haven’t changed,” she told reporters in Melbourne on Sunday. “The program is set up to keep people safe.”

 ?? WILLIAM WEST / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Australian Bernard Tomic exercises in his hotel room in
Melbourne on Friday as players quarantine in hotels.
WILLIAM WEST / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Australian Bernard Tomic exercises in his hotel room in Melbourne on Friday as players quarantine in hotels.

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