Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Djokovic loses in court, deported by Australia

Defending champ out of season’s first major

- By Howard Fendrich

Novak Djokovic’s loss in a court of law also is a loss for the Australian Open, a loss for tennis fans and a loss for the sport as a whole.

Setting aside, for a moment, everything that led to his deportatio­n Sunday from Australia — a fundamenta­lly hard-to-fathom reason for any athlete to be forced to sit out any event — who wouldn’t want to see the player who dominated men’s Grand Slam tennis in 2021 competing for what would be a historic title to begin 2022?

Unaccustom­ed to defeats on a big stage, especially lately, he could have pursued his 10th trophy at Melbourne Park, which would have broken his own record, and his 21st overall from all major championsh­ips, which would have broken the men’s mark he shares with Rafael Nadal (who is in Australia) and Roger Federer (who is not, following knee surgery).

Instead, when play began Sunday night, 2009 winner Nadal, as it turned out, was the only past Australian Open champ in the 128player men’s field. And 150thranke­d Salvatore Caruso, a 29year-old from Italy who is on a fourmatch losing streak in Grand Slam main-draw play and failed to get through qualifying in Melbourne, was on the line in the bracket where No. 1 Djokovic stood until Sunday’s Federal Court decision.

Less than 18 hours before the start of the tournament, a threejudge panel unanimousl­y upheld a government minister’s right to cancel Djokovic’s visa, ending his last-ditch effort to be able to play and bringing a close to what the ATP Tour rightly called “a deeply regrettabl­e series of events.”

This was how Nadal put it Saturday, when everyone still was awaiting a resolution: “Honestly, I’m a little bit tired of the situation.”

And to think: This 11-day saga could have been avoided if Djokovic got the COVID-19 vaccine — like more than 95% of all Top 100 men and women in their tours’ respective rankings — or, like at least two other players who didn’t have the shots and stayed away, accepted that he wasn’t allowed to enter the Australian Open. Vaccinatio­n was a requiremen­t for anyone at the tournament: players, their coaches and other entourage members, spectators, media members and everyone else on-site, too.

Djokovic sought, and initially was granted, a medical exemption, saying that he tested positive for COVID-19 in December. In the end, he was forced to leave Australia because he was seen as someone who could stir up anti-vaccine sentiments in a country, like many others, going through a surge of the omicron variant.

That’s a big reason this drew so much attention.

Yes, it involved one of the most successful and famous athletes around, someone who came within one victory of the first calendarye­ar Grand Slam in men’s tennis since 1969. And yes, it involved an intriguing “What will come next?” miniseries that included an eighthour airport interrogat­ion, a forced four-day stay in an immigratio­n hotel, a handful of court hearings, two cancelatio­ns of a superstar’s visa, one appeal that was successful and, ultimately, another that was denied.

But as polarizing a figure as Djokovic might be, rightly or wrongly, nothing is as polarizing among some folks these days as the coronaviru­s pandemic itself and the subject of those who won’t get inoculated.

What happens next with Djokovic will be fascinatin­g to watch, because there are so many unknowns. Nobody knows when he will return to action. Nobody knows which future tournament­s might have vaccine requiremen­ts. Nobody knows whether Djokovic will ever get vaccinated.

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