Australasian Leisure Management
Sep 2, 2021

Victorian Government to impose stricter rules for unvaccinated athletes at 2022 Australian Open

Victorian Sports Minister, Martin Pakula has announced that unvaccinated tennis players will face stricter rules at the 2022 Australian Open than vaccinated athletes.

Confident of the first grand slam of 2022 proceeding in Melbourne in January next year, Minister Pakula today advised “it’s hard to be certain about anything right now, but I’m very confident that the Australian Open will go ahead.

“On our vaccine horizon, the second half of January, we should be in a very good position.

“We were able to get the tournament away last year, and that was with zero% of the community vaxxed.

“So I’m very confident the Australian Open will go ahead, and it’s very important that it does.”

Speaking to Pacific Star Network’s SEN sports radio station, Minister Pakula stated “whether or not it’s as strict as you won’t get into Australia if you’re not vaccinated, that I don’t know.

“What I’m very clear on, what I’m very sure about, is that the rules for unvaccinated players and the rules for vaccinated players, I’m quite confident will be very different.

“We’ll provide clarity for the ATP and the WTA very shortly, but I think they can be very confident that being vaccinated will be a wise thing for them to do before they seek to come to Australia.

Former number one tennis star, Andy Murray, who is fully vaccinated, says players have a responsibility to “look out for others,” as a regular international sports traveller.

Murray was quoted as saying “the reason why all of us are getting vaccinated is to look out for the wider public. We have a responsibility as players that are travelling across the world … to look out for everyone else as well.

“I’m happy that I’m vaccinated. I’m hoping that more players choose to have it in the coming months.

“I know the conversations with regards to the Australian Open and stuff are already happening. The players that have been vaccinated are going to potentially be able to; well, they’re going to be having very different conditions to players who are not vaccinated.

“I can see it’s going to become an issue over the coming months.

“If tournaments are going to go ahead and be held like the Aussie Open - a lot of the tour is not vaccinated - but for them to go ahead and host it, they’re going to be allowing the players that have had the vaccination to train and move freely between the hotel and stuff, potentially not having to quarantine and things like that.

Adding his thoughts on the matter, Tennis Australia Chief Executive, Craig Tiley commented “as far as vaccinations (go), we’re hoping as a nation that we’ll be at the target of 80% plus by the time we get to November, and that will certainly help the situation for the event in January.

“There’s a lot of time between now and when we get going, but at this point of time, we’re planning on having a bubble, a two-week bubble, where the players will be able to move freely between the hotel and the courts.

“Previously, we had quarantine, but now we’re looking at more of a bubble-type scenario.”

Tennis Australia is yet to outline quarantine requirements or vaccination conditions for international players and spectators.

This week at the US Open, fans were required to show proof of vaccination upon entry.

In both the men’s and women’s main tours, the vaccination rates of the players are currently just above 50%.

Coronavirus has massive impact on Victorian event businesses 
Businesses in the Victorian events sector have seen their income fall by 80% amid ongoing lockdown cancellations.

The findings, in a new survey from Save Victorian Events, shows incomes have taken a massive hit with event businesses seeing an 81% drop in income from April 2020 to May 2021.

From May to August this year the figure is even worse, with businesses earning on average just 14% of their normal income.

The recent lockdowns have resulted in 34% of Victorian event industry businesses having all their events and projects cancelled for the rest of the year, and a further 61% having most cancelled.

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