Australian Open: Craig Tiley asks for patience with logistics and protocols

The world’s leading tennis players are set to start arriving in Melbourne from January 15 and must undergo 14 days in hotel quarantine.

Published : Jan 06, 2021 11:19 IST , Melbourne

Australian Open chief executive, Craig Tiley. - GETTY IMAGES
Australian Open chief executive, Craig Tiley. - GETTY IMAGES
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Australian Open chief executive, Craig Tiley. - GETTY IMAGES

Australian Open chief executive Craig Tiley is reassuring players that the delayed season-opening Grand Slam tournament will get underway on February 8 and has asked for patience with the logistics and quarantine planning amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

The world’s leading tennis players are set to start arriving in Melbourne from January 15 and must undergo 14 days in hotel quarantine, although they’ll be allowed to practice for limited periods daily in a bio-secure bubble.

Reports from Europe about players being unclear on charter flight details prompted a series of Twitter posts from Tiley to provide an update. Australian Open organisers are chartering up to 20 flights from Dubai, Singapore and Los Angeles to bring players to Melbourne.

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“There have been some unavoidable delays finalising flight details for players and I’d like to take this opportunity to provide an update,” Tiley posted on Twitter . “There are a lot of pieces to this logistical puzzle and the last few are being finalised right now.

“We appreciate your patience and are conscious that time timelines are very tight.”

The professional circuit resumes this week, with main-draw action Wednesday at the Abu Dhabi WTA Women’s Tennis Open, where Sofia Kenin leads the field, and Thursday at the ATP’s Delray Beach Open.

Women’s singles qualifying or the Australian Open will be staged in Dubai and men’s singles qualifying in Doha, Qatar from January 10-13.

Top-ranked Novak Djokovic and No. 2 Rafael Nadal will be involved in a 12-team ATP Cup to be staged at Melbourne Park, along with a WTA tournament and an ATP 250 event, from February 1-5 to give players some exposure to match play in Australia before the season’s first major.

 

Despite a small recent outbreak of coronavirus in some parts of Sydney and Melbourne, organisers are still planning to have limited crowds at the Australian Open.

Tennis Australia is hoping to have up to 35 percent capacity at Melbourne Park, all with ticketed seating and divided into three zones to minimize movement around the sprawling complex. There’s still a chance there’ll be no crowds if the number of coronavirus cases in Melbourne spikes and triggers tighter health and travel restrictions.

“Clearly, if there is significant community spread at the time, the government will make decisions on reducing those crowd numbers, or not,” Tiley told Melbourne radio station 3AW on Wednesday. “Those are the things we’ve got to be ready to change at any point.

“We are not going to put an event on that is going to be unsafe for the community.”

The players will be tested before travelling to Australia and every day during quarantine.

“When they come of their 14 days there’s no way they are going to be in a position where they are going to be spreading the virus,” Tiley said.

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