Shanghai Daily

Australian Open ‘will go ahead’

- TENNIS

THE Australian Open will begin as scheduled on Monday even though a worker at one of the Melbourne hotels used to quarantine players and their entourages tested positive for COVID-19, tournament director Craig Tiley said yesterday.

The day’s warm-up matches at Melbourne Park were called off after the case was announced late on Wednesday, and those who underwent quarantine at the Grand Hyatt hotel were told to get tested and isolate until they had a result.

“We’re absolutely confident the Australian Open will go ahead,” Tiley told reporters. “We are starting on Monday.”

He said the 507 people affected, 160 of them players, would have their tests completed yesterday. If the results were negative, the players can participat­e in the six warm-up events at the Grand Slam venue to allow them to get match practice after 14 days in quarantine.

“This does give us three days for the lead-in events to be completed,” he said, adding that the draw for the Grand Slam tournament had been postponed from yesterday to today.

Earlier, Victoria state health officials said the testing of the tennis cohort was precaution­ary. “We think the risk to other guests in the hotel — tennis players and their accompanyi­ng staff — is relatively low,” deputy chief health officer Allen Cheng told reporters.

Victoria endured one of the longest and toughest lockdowns in the world to contain the new coronaviru­s, and Wednesday’s case was the first to be locally acquired in the state for almost a month.

State Premier Dan Andrews has made it clear the safety of the community is paramount and said there were “no guarantees” the Australian Open would go ahead. “At this stage, the tennis shouldn’t be impacted by this,” he told reporters. “These things can change (but) this has been a textbook response to this.”

Michael O’Brien, the leader of the opposition in Victoria’s state parliament, called on the government to make a call by tomorrow on whether the tournament would take place.

“We don’t want to see a situation as we did with the Grand Prix, where crowds were literally turning up, only to be turned away,” he told Melbourne’s Herald Sun newspaper. “I think people are entitled to know what’s happening, and the government should be making their minds up in the next 24 to 48 hours.”

The Australian Grand Prix, the traditiona­l season opener of the Formula One championsh­ip, was cancelled because of the COVID-19 pandemic last March a few hours before the cars were due to take to the track at Melbourne’s Albert Park. Tiley rejected the comparison.

“The probabilit­y is very low that there’ll be an issue. We expect them all to test negative,” he said. “The plan is to continue to play tomorrow as planned.”

Tiley is experience­d in rescheduli­ng matches because of rain, hot weather and bushfire smoke and organizers released the orders of play for today, when wet weather is forecast, with 67 matches scheduled across the six tune-up events.

“With the rain, we do have the luxury of having three stadium courts and eight indoor courts. That will enable us to not get ahead but at least to finish by Sunday.”

(Reuters)

 ??  ?? China’s Wang Yafan gets directions after a COVID-19 test at a hotel in Melbourne yesterday, as six Australian Open warm-up events were on hold and hundreds of players and officials in isolation as a fresh coronaviru­s case left organizers scrambling to ensure the Grand Slam tennis tournament goes ahead. — AFP
China’s Wang Yafan gets directions after a COVID-19 test at a hotel in Melbourne yesterday, as six Australian Open warm-up events were on hold and hundreds of players and officials in isolation as a fresh coronaviru­s case left organizers scrambling to ensure the Grand Slam tennis tournament goes ahead. — AFP

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