Novak Djokovic won’t get official support with lobbying from Tennis Australia should he seek to enter the country for the first major of 2023, a year after he was deported because he was not vaccinated for COVID-19.
The 21-time Grand Slam champion wasn’t allowed to defend his
Australian Open title last January after a tumultuous 10-day legal saga that
culminated with his visa being revoked on the eve of the tournament eventually
won by Rafael Nadal.
Djokovic originally was granted an exemption to strict
vaccination rules by two medical panels and Tennis Australia in order to play
in the Australian Open but, after traveling to Melbourne believing he had all
his paperwork in order, the exemption was rejected by the Australian Border
Force.
“It is not a matter we can lobby on. It is a matter that
definitely stays between the two of them,” Australian Open tournament director
Craig Tiley said Wednesday at a launch for the 2023 event, referring to
Djokovic and the Australian government.
“And then, depending on the outcome,” Tiley added, “we would
welcome him to the Australian Open.”
Being deported made Djokovic subject to a possible
three-year exclusion period that prevents the granting of a further temporary
visa, although Australian Border Force in January said any exclusion period
“will be considered as part of any new visa application and can be waived in
certain circumstances.”
The ABF said each cased is assessed on its merits.
Australia has changed its border rules and, since July 6,
incoming travelers no longer have to provide proof of COVID-19 vaccinations.
Tiley was heavily criticized for his role in the confusion
that led to the then top-ranked player in men’s tennis landing in Australia
believing he was exempt from strict laws for unvaccinated travelers, then being
questioned by border officials for hours at Melbourne Airport before being held
in immigration detention.
The main source of confusion was the exemptions granted to
Djokovic and some others by the state government and Tennis Australia to
participate in the tournament — despite regulations requiring all fans,
officials and players be vaccinated for COVID-19 — which ultimately still
needed to be assessed by border security officials.
Djokovic was allowed to practice at Melbourne Park after
some initial success in a court of law, but Australia’s Immigration Minister
Alex Hawke ultimately used discretionary powers to cancel Djokovic’s visa on
character grounds, stating he was a “talisman of a community of anti-vaccine
sentiment.”
A recent winner of tournaments in Israel and Kazakhstan,
Djokovic can apply to new Immigration Minister Andrew Giles to reconsider his
visa status.
Tiley, who is also the Tennis Australia chief executive,
said he met with Djokovic in London last month during the Laver Cup and
believes the Serbian star holds no bitterness about the saga.
But Tiley stressed that the pair spoke only generally about
Djokovic’s visa situation.
“He said that he would obviously love to come back to
Australia but he knows it’s going to be an ultimate decision for the Federal
Government and he accepts that,” Tiley said. “If you notice, he is playing a
lot of tennis at the end of the year in anticipation and hope there is a
successful outcome with his application. But that is up to him.”
A review into episode that made global headlines has led to
Tennis Australia outsourcing visa applications by players and their entourages
to a company specializing in immigration matters.
Tiley said the Australian Open had no plans to follow the
lead of Wimbledon, which banned Russian and Belarusian players from competing
this year because of the invasion of Ukraine.
But there will be no reference to the nationality of those
players, including 2022 Australian Open finalist Daniil Medvedev of Russia and
two-time women’s singles champion Victoria Azarenka of Belarus, as per tour
rules.
Tiley declined to discuss plans for a revamp of the
Australian schedule that is expected to include a new mixed-teams tournament
featuring 16 nations held across the country prior to the Australian Open.
Such a competition would have similarities to the
long-running Hopman Cup, which was held in Perth for three decades prior to the
introduction of the ATP Cup in 2020.
Tiley, who promised the return of elite tennis to Perth for
the first time since the pandemic while in Western Australia last week, said a
summer program will be outlined soon.
“We hope to have our major cities have a major event, a
different event, a one of a kind,” he said. “We will make that announcement
when we are ready to make that announcement.
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