Australian Open: 47 players quarantined after positive Covid-19 tests on two charter flights

Twenty-four players on a US charter flight to Melbourne must quarantine for two weeks after a flight crew member and a passenger – not a player – tested positive. Both gave negative results within 72 hours of boarding the flight, which carried a total of 79 people.

Another 23 players are also quarantined after a charter flight carrying 64 people from Abu Dhabi arrived in Melbourne. One person – again not a player – gave positive results after the flight, despite the fact that he presented the documentation of a negative Covid-19 test before take-off.

All 47 affected players will not be able to leave the hotel rooms for a period of 14 days until they are medically authorized. They will not be eligible to practice.

The organizers of the Australian Open released two statements on Saturday detailing how the players will be affected.

“All the passengers on the flight are already in quarantine hotels and the positive case, which is not a player and which gave negative results before the flight, was transferred to a health hotel,” the second statement said. Abu Dhabi-Melbourne flight.

Passengers who tested positive for the virus on the US flight were also transferred to a health hotel.

“Our thoughts are with the two people who gave positive results on the flight and we wish them a lot of recovery,” said Craig Tiley, director of the Australian Open tournament in the first statement of the organizers.

READ: Tennys Sandgren tested positive for Covid-19, then boarded the plane to the Australian Open

“Rigorous testing program”

In a tweet that was subsequently deleted, French player Alize Cornet, who is in Melbourne but was not on any plane, described the situation as “crazy”.

“Soon, half of the AO players will have to isolate themselves,” she wrote on Twitter. “Weeks and weeks of training and hard work to lose for a positive person for Covid in an empty 3/4 plane. I’m sorry, but this is crazy.”

World No. 71 Sorana Cirstea said she understood the need to be quarantined, but the fact that she could not train and practice would affect her ability to compete effectively at the Australian Open.

“People complain that we have the right,” Cirstea wrote on Twitter. “I have no problem staying in the room for 14 days watching Netflix. Believe me, this is a dream come true, even a vacation.

“What we can’t do is COMPETE after sitting on a couch for 14 days. This is the problem, not the quarantine rule.

“I would need at least 3 weeks after that to be in decent shape again and to compete at a high level! Cirstea said in another tweet.

Meanwhile, Yulia Putintseva posted a video on Twitter of a mouse in her hotel room.
“I’m trying to change the room for 2 hours! And no one came to help because of the quarantine situation!” Putintseva wrote on Twitter.
“What I don’t understand is that, because no one has ever told us, if a person on board is positive, the whole plane has to be isolated,” said no. 28 Putintseva in another tweet. “I’d think twice before I came here.”

Originally scheduled to begin this month, the Australian Open has been rescheduled for February 8-21 due to Covid-19 concerns.

While most of the world’s top players went straight to Melbourne, others such as Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Serena Williams flew to Adelaide.

“SA Health has confirmed that there is no one with an active COVID-19 infection in the entire Adelaide tennis cohort,” the Australian Open wrote on Twitter later on Saturday. “Testing will continue daily.”

Ahead of Saturday’s developments, tournament organizers said players would “also undergo a more rigorous testing schedule than most returning travelers.”

Go to CNN.com/sport for more news, features, and videos

Everyone has to be quarantined for 14 days, but they are allowed to go out for five hours a day to train in strict bio-safe bubbles before a lot of warm-up tournaments, all in Melbourne, the week before the grand slam.

But the 47 players now housed in their hotels will be left wondering how they will be able to prepare properly or the first grand slam of the season.

CNN’s Dan Kamal contributed to the report.

.Source