Melbourne to lock down, AO to continue without fans

Tennis

MELBOURNE, Australia — Tennis fans will be locked out of the Australian Open from 11:59pm Thursday [AEST] as the state of Victoria prepares for a five-day lockdown amid a growing COVID-19 cluster in the city’s north-west.

The state’s outbreak began at Melbourne Airport’s Holiday Inn last week and has now risen to 13 cases, five of which were locally acquired on Thursday. All cases at the hotel are presumed to be the UK strain of coronavirus, which is proving to be highly contagious and more difficult to contain than the original variant.

On Friday morning, with the state’s active case tally standing at 19, the Victorian Cabinet met and decided the safest course of action was to return to Stage 4 restrictions and place the state back into lockdown, for a minimum of five days, meaning fans will be unable to attend the Australian Open until at least the quarterfinal stage in week two.

“The UK strain is moving at a velocity that has not been seen anywhere in our country,” Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews said during a press conference on Friday. “I am confident that this short, sharp circuit breaker will be effective. I want to be here next Wednesday announcing that these restrictions are coming off.”

Panic around the state had set in Thursday when Brunetti cafe at Melbourne Airport’s Terminal 4 was added to the ‘Tier 1’ exposure site list, after a newly confirmed positive case of the virus was present at the location for more than eight hours on Tuesday afternoon.

Melbourne Airport confirmed 29 domestic flights arrived and departed the terminal during the period, before a deep clean of the area was conducted overnight.

The lockdown announcement is a significant blow for Tennis Australia which has already faced backlash over its ‘hard quarantine’ of international player arrivals last month, in addition to having to deal with a daily attendance cap of 30,000 through the first week.

Victorian residents are familiar with life in lockdown. Between July and October last year, the state was placed into hard lockdown as it battled its second wave of COVID-19. The state’s active cases peaked on August 7 with 6,769 but the number had dipped into double figures by October 17, allowing the Australian Open to take place, albeit a month later than originally scheduled.

Last September’s US Open in New York was played behind closed doors while the following month’s French Open permitted just 1,000 spectators per day. At this stage it’s unclear whether crowds will return to Melbourne Park later in the tournament.

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