Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Questions abound about U.S. Open

- By Howard Fendrich AP Tennis Writer

Novak Djokovic is fretting about “harsh” restrictio­ns on players’ entourages and other “extreme” changes proposed for the U.S. Open — and saying he might not participat­e if it is played.

As of now, defending champion Rafael Nadal would not want to be in Flushing Meadows at all, either.

While the tennis world awaits a decision, which could come as soon as next week, from the U.S. Tennis Associatio­n’s board about whether to hold the Grand Slam tournament in New York in August amid the coronaviru­s pandemic — and if so, with what precaution­s — there are plenty of questions surroundin­g the event.

A look at some of the issues:

Would Players Go?

The top two men in the rankings, No. 1 Djokovic and No. 2 Nadal, winners of the last eight major titles, expressed ambivalenc­e. Djokovic went so far as to tell Serbia’s state broadcaste­r RTS on Tuesday that most players he’s talked to “were quite negative” about entering the U.S. Open and that for him, “as things stand, most probably the season will continue on clay at the beginning of September.” The hard-court U.S. Open is scheduled to begin maindraw play Aug. 31; the clay-court French Open was moved from a May start to late September because of the COVID-19 outbreak. “The rules and regulation­s they informed us about, that we would have to follow in case we play in the U.S. Open, are really extreme,” Djokovic said in a previous interview with Serbian channel TV Prva. Last week, Nadal was asked whether he would be at the U.S. Open. “Today,” he said, “I will say, ‘No.’ In a couple of months? I don’t know.”

Would Fans Be Allowed?

It sounds unlikely that spectators would be able to attend. Stacey Allaster, the USTA’s chief executive for profession­al tennis, said her group has been trying to figure out how to “engage fans virtually.” Last year, about 850,000 people went to the National Tennis Center over the three weeks of qualifying and maindraw action.

What About Entourages?

“A player coming with an entourage of five, six, seven, eight is not something that’s in the plan,” Allaster told the AP. Djokovic called that policy “simply unthinkabl­e, because you need a tennis coach, fitness trainer, then a physiother­apist; a great team of people.” Dan Evans, who is ranked 28th, disagreed, saying having a one-person-per-player restrictio­n is not “such a big deal.” “Not everyone’s traveling with physios and fitness trainers like Novak said,” Evans told the BBC, “so I think his argument there is not really valid for the rest of the draw.”

How Would Health Be Protected?

Players would need to prove they had tested negative for COVID-19 before traveling on charter flights the USTA would organize from a handful of cities. There would likely be daily health questionna­ires and temperatur­e checks, along with occasional nasal, saliva or antibody testing; Djokovic said he was told there would be two or three tests per week. Djokovic said players would not be allowed to go into Manhattan; Allaster spoke about “centralize­d” housing.

Will There Be Format Changes?

The USTA won’t change the scoring system — some unsanction­ed exhibition­s taking place have used a first-to-4-games format — and wouldn’t shorten men’s matches to best-of-three-sets unless players lobbied for that. But it’s possible the total number of events — which usually includes qualifying, doubles, juniors and wheelchair tennis — could be reduced.

Follow Howard Fendrich on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ HowardFend­rich/ More AP Sports coverage: https://www.apnews.com/apf-Tennis and https://twitter. com/AP—Sports

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