Australian Open: Two more players 'test positive' amid quarantine row
Two more Australian Open tennis
players have tested positive for Covid-19 after arriving in Melbourne, state
health officials said on Tuesday.
It comes after a player was
believed to have tested positive on Sunday, amid growing controversy over the
event.
One more "non-playing
participant" also has Covid, bringing the overall total linked to the Open
to seven, including a flight attendant.
Some 1,200 people have flown in
for the tournament, which begins on 8 February.
Victorian Chief Health Officer
Brett Sutton said in a statement that the latest three positive tests of two
players and a non-participant were of a woman in her 20s and two men in their
30s, all of whom were in hotel quarantine.
But there was confusion when
Tennis Australia disputed the latest announcement. Chief executive Craig Tiley
said no players had tested positive at all - only those in their entourages. He
said no players were in the medi-hotel, to which people are transferred if they
test positive while in hotel quarantine.
Rows over quarantine rules have
cast a shadow over the upcoming event.
Some players have expressed
frustration about being confined to hotel rooms full-time while other rivals
are not.
And some residents in Melbourne -
a city which endured one of the world's longest lockdowns last year - have
their own concerns about the potential Covid risk posed by the tournament.
Positive cases on three flights
have forced 72 players into full quarantine, meaning they have to isolate
full-time in their hotel rooms for 14 days instead of being allowed outside to
train like other participants.
Mr Tiley insisted players had
been made aware of the quarantine possibilities beforehand and said that some
may have not taken it seriously and "brushed it off".
But he acknowledged it was
"not an even playing field" for those stuck in their hotel rooms,
given their competitors have access to five hours of court practice a day.
The majority of some 500 players
attending the Open have accepted the conditions, organisers say.
Labor MP Bill Shorten told
players to "get a grip", adding: "People have died. People lost
their jobs... and you got these pampered sooks who are having a cry over their
conditions."
What have the players said?
World number one Novak Djokovic
lobbied authorities to relax quarantine rules for players - including making
the periods shorter.
The suggestions earned him
criticism from Australian player Nick Kyrgios, who tweeted: "Djokovic is a
tool."
Last year Djokovic organised an
exhibition event in which he and others contracted the virus, drawing the
disdain of Kyrgios at the time.
Kyrgios also criticised the
girlfriend of fellow Australian player Bernard Tomic after she featured in a
news clip complaining about hotel food and having to wash her hair by herself.
Vanessa Sierra has since said her
comments were taken out of context and that she had received death threats,
after her "I don't wash my own hair" quote was mocked online.
While most players are being
quarantined in Melbourne, Djokovic is part of a smaller group of big-name stars
including Rafael Nadal, Serena Williams and Naomi Osaka who are stationed in
Adelaide for an exhibition match.
Two-time Australian Open champion
Victoria Azarenka issued a plea to fellow players to show "co-operation,
understanding and empathy for the local community that has been going through a
lot of very demanding restrictions".
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