Rome News-Tribune

USTA says it’s still preparing for U.S. Open in New York

- By Howard Fendrich

As coronaviru­s cases spike in other parts of the country a month before the U.S. Open is supposed to start in New York, the U.S. Tennis Associatio­n said Friday it “continues its plans” to hold its marquee event and another tournament beforehand.

The U.S. Open — usually the year’s last Grand Slam tournament, but the second of 2020 because of the pandemic — is scheduled to run Aug. 31 to Sept. 13.

The Billie Jean King National Tennis Center also will host the Western & Southern Open on Aug. 20-28; that tuneup was moved from Cincinnati as part of a doublehead­er organized by the USTA.

Players will be allowed on-site on Aug. 16.

A statement released Friday

by the USTA said: “We remain confident that our top priority, the health and safety of all involved in both tournament­s, remains on track.”

What is unclear at this point is which players will participat­e. While Serena Williams and Naomi Osaka have said she will be at both events, for example, current women’s No. 1 Ash Barty is staying away. Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal have not made their plans known.

The USTA statement added that details of its health and safety plan will be released closer to the start of competitio­n. The group said it is working with the WTA and ATP tours.

The USTA is putting most players and their limited entourages in specific hotels — creating something of a bubble environmen­t — but also is allowing participan­ts to rent private houses.

Profession­al tennis has been on hiatus since March because of the coronaviru­s outbreak. The women’s tour is supposed to return next week with a tournament in Palermo, Italy.

“New York State continues to be one of the safest places in the country as it relates to the COVID-19 virus,” the USTA said.

That’s now true — although the area was a major U.S. hot spot early in the pandemic, so much so that a building at the U.S. Open site was used as a temporary hospital.

New York hospitals saw more than 18,000 patients with COVID-19 at a time in mid-April when infections surged and more than 750 patients with the illness died each day. Those figures plunged in May, and rates of hospitaliz­ations and new positive COVID-19 cases have been relatively stable since June.

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