Sports & Fitness

Murray supports restrictions on unvaccinated players at Australian Open

Tennis ace backs imposition of stricter conditions on professional athletes by local authorities following new vaccine mandate

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 13 Oct 2021 7:00PM

Murray supports restrictions on unvaccinated players at Australian Open
Three-time Grand Slam champion, Andy Murray (pictured above) said he supports any conditions placed upon Australian Open athletes by local government as he feels that Australians ‘have had to endure a painful 18 months’ due to the pandemic and ‘if people are going to come into the country and potentially risk an outbreak in their community… that’s understandable’ – AFP, October 13, 2021

INDIAN WELLS – Three-time Grand Slam champion, Andy Murray, expects unvaccinated players to compete at the Australian Open but says he would support moves by local authorities to impose stricter conditions on them at Melbourne Park than those who have been fully vaccinated against Covid-19.

Victoria sports minister, Martin Pakula, said yesterday that players planning to compete at the first Grand Slam of the year should get vaccinated to give themselves the best chance of competing in Melbourne.

Tennis Australia has declined to comment on arrangements for players based on their vaccination status.

However, vaccinated players are expected to be given more freedom to move around and may also be able to skip the country's mandatory 14-day quarantine upon arrival.

“My understanding is if you’re unvaccinated, you’re still allowed to play, it’s just the rules are going to be different,” Andy told a news conference after yesterday’s third-round Indian Wells defeat to Alexander Zverev.

“You might just have to leave (for Australia) a few weeks earlier than everyone else. That’s the player’s choice. If the local government puts that in place, then I would support that.

“It would be great if more players got vaccinated.

“Australia, in particular, has been very, very strict over there. The public there have had to endure a painful 18 months or whatever.

“If people are going to come into the country and potentially risk an outbreak in their community, yeah, that’s understandable.”

World number four, Alexander, who in April said he had not been vaccinated, did not want to be stuck in the middle of the debate.

“I fully respect the decisions of players that are not vaccinated. I also do respect the decision that the Australian government is making,” he said.

“I don’t want to be in the middle of something, which I kind of am not involved in, because I don’t have that issue of the two-week quarantine, all that. I don’t want to go against anybody here.”

The Australian Open is due to start on January 17. – Reuters, October 13, 2021

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