Unvaccinated players can compete at Australian Open: leaked email

Unvaccinated players will be allowed to

compete at the Australian Open but must complete 14 days in hotel quarantine,

according to a leaked WTA email Monday, although a government official

insisted the matter was not yet settled.

The rules would also likely apply to the men’s tour, leaving the door open

for world number one Novak Djokovic to defend his title at Melbourne Park in

January.

The email to players from the women’s governing body was leaked to New York

Times tennis writer Ben Rothenberg, who posted it on Twitter, and contradicts

officials’ earlier statements implying unvaccinated players would not be

granted visas.

The email said that players fully inoculated against coronavirus would not

have to quarantine or remain in bio-secure bubbles, enjoying “complete

freedom of movement”.

Unvaccinated players can come to Australia but would have to undergo two

weeks’ mandatory hotel quarantine and submit to regular testing, it stated.

“We feel the need to reach out to you all to clear up false and misleading

information that has recently been spread by other parties about the

conditions the players will be forced to endure at next year’s Australian

Open,” the email read.

“Because Victoria’s vaccination rate will hit 80 percent at the end of the

week and 90 percent next month, it has been confirmed that conditions for

players at the Australian Open will improve significantly.”

Vaccinated players could arrive any time after December 1, must have a

negative test within 72 hours of departing for Australia and test again

within 24 hours of arrival. Otherwise, there will be no restrictions, the

email said.

The apparent move to allow unvaccinated players into Australia contradicts

comments from senior government officials last week, including Immigration

Minister Alex Hawke, who said “every visitor to Australia will need to be

double vaccinated”. – Still talking –

Victoria state Sports Minister Martin Pakula insisted Monday that the

vaccination requirements were “not settled yet”.

“We’re still talking to the Commonwealth (national government) about

whether the rule for international unvaccinated arrivals is either 14 days

quarantine or they’re not coming into the country at all,” he said in

response to the leaked email.

“We don’t expect that to be settled for another couple of weeks.”

Nine-time Australian Open champion Djokovic is one of many players who have

refused to share their vaccination status, casting doubt over whether he will

defend his title.

“I don’t know if I’m going to go to Australia,” he told Serbian newspaper

Blic last week, refusing to say whether he was inoculated, calling it “a

private matter”.

Reports have put the vaccination rate for tennis players at between 50 and

60 percent, but Pakula spoke with Australian Open chief Craig Tiley on Monday

and he believed they were much higher.

“I understand from my chat with Craig Tiley this morning that the vax rate

for players is rising pretty quickly now and it’s near enough to 80 percent.”

Melbourne is in Victoria state, which on Friday emerged from one of the

world’s most prolonged series of Covid lockdowns, in total more than 260 days

since the pandemic began.

This year’s Australian Open was hit hard by the pandemic with all players

going through two weeks of quarantine, while crowds were restricted and a

five-day snap lockdown was called mid-event.

Source: Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha (BSS)