The Jerusalem Post

Nadal pessimisti­c over chances of return to normal for tennis

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Rafael Nadal has said he is very pessimisti­c about the possibilit­y of tennis returning to normal any time soon because of the new coronaviru­s pandemic that shut down the sport last month.

Profession­al tennis has been suspended until the end of July, at the earliest, and the Spaniard said on Sunday that serious problems stand in the way of a resumption.

“From my point of view, I’m very pessimisti­c that the circuit can resume normal activity,” the world No. 2 said in an online chat organized by the Spanish Tennis Federation.

“In tennis, you need to travel every week, stay in hotels, go to different countries. Even if we play without an audience, to organize any event you need a lot of people involved, which cannot be ignored. At an internatio­nal level I see a serious problem.”

The coronaviru­s outbreak has decimated the world sports calendar, forcing the postponeme­nt of the Olympic Games, which includes tennis, and the cancellati­on of Wimbledon.

French Open organizers have reschedule­d that event for the end of September, shortly after the US Open, although Nadal said public health took priority over tennis tournament­s.

“We have already said many times we are in a very difficult moment, for everyone,” Nadal added. “Step-by-step it looks like things are slightly less bad, but we’ve been through one and a half very tough months, lots of irreparabl­e losses and other losses that are less important, but without doubt will cause suffering in society in the following months.

“I hope it will be months not years because it’s also an economic issue as well. Lots of people are going to lose their jobs. These are sad moments when you see so many people dying.”

Nadal, 33, said that even when tennis does resume the players will need to recover their fitness levels.

“It will be a very tough job to regain fitness and you will need lots of discipline and lots of suffering,” he said. “The sooner we can resume activity the better. From the point of view about going back to competitio­ns, I’m pessimisti­c.

“But there are many other things more important than tennis.”

Spain has been especially badly hit by the virus with 223,759 infections and 23,190 deaths.

Nadal is due to play in a virtual Madrid Open starting on Monday with 32 of the world’s best players swapping rackets for gaming controls in a computeriz­ed version of the tournament. (Reuters)

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