LONDON—Novak Djokovic is still awaiting word on whether he will be allowed to return to the Australian Open in January after missing the tournament this year because he is not vaccinated against Covid-19.
“It’s really not in my hands right now,” Djokovic said Thursday at the Laver Cup. “So I’m hoping I will get some positive news.”
Djokovic is a 21-time Grand Slam singles champion—a total that stands second among men, behind only Rafael Nadal’s 22 and one ahead of Roger Federer’s 20—and he has won a record nine of those trophies at Melbourne Park.
But he was deported from Australia last January after a 10-day legal saga that culminated with his visa being revoked; he originally was granted an exemption to strict vaccination rules by two medical panels and Tennis Australia in order to play in the Australian Open.
Australia has since changed its border rules—since July 6, incoming travelers no longer have to have provide proof of Covid-19 vaccinations, or even provide a negative Covid test.
The Australian Border Force said after Djokovic’s visa was canceled that “a person whose visa has been canceled may be subject to a three-year exclusion period that prevents the grant of a further temporary visa.”
However, it added: “The exclusion period will be considered as part of any new visa application and can be waived in certain circumstances, noting each case is assessed on its own merits.”
A Tennis Australia spokesperson said Friday that any decision on Djokovic’s visa for the January 16 to 29, 2023, tournament was not its decision to make.
The 35-year-old Djokovic, who is from Serbia, has insisted he will not get the shots against the illness caused by the coronavirus, even if it means missing tennis events.
He was not able to enter two of this season’s four Grand Slam tournaments, including the US Open that ended this month. The United States and Canada currently bar entry to foreign citizens who have not received Covid-19 vaccines, and so he also missed four other events in North America in 2022.
Djokovic was able to get into France, losing to Rafael Nadal in the quarterfinals at the French Open in June, and England, winning the title at Wimbledon in July.
The Laver Cup, which begins Friday, is Djokovic’s first competition since Wimbledon.
“I don’t have any regrets. I mean, I do feel sad that I wasn’t able to play [at the US Open], but that was a decision that I made and I knew what the consequences would be,” he said Thursday. “So I accepted them and that’s it.”
Djokovic has spent more weeks at No. 1 in the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) rankings than anyone else, breaking Roger Federer’s record, and is No. 7 this week, in part because of a lack of activity and in part because there were no ranking points awarded to anyone at Wimbledon this year.
“I’m not used to making, obviously in the last 15-20 years, longer breaks between the tournaments, but it is what it is,” Djokovic said. “That’s kind of the situation I was in. I’m just excited to be able to play here now—and most of the other indoor [tournaments] for the rest of the season.”
A former professional tennis player-turned-coach from Chile, meanwhile, received a lifetime ban from the sport Thursday for a record-high number of match-fixing offenses.
The International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) said Sebastián Rivera was found guilty of 64 match-fixing offenses, “the highest number ever detected for a player by the ITIA or its predecessor the Tennis Integrity Unit.”
Rivera, whose highest ATP ranking was 705, was also fined $250,000. He had been provisionally suspended in June while the charges were investigated, but he “failed to engage meaningfully with the disciplinary process,” the ITIA said.
Two-time Grand Slam champion Simona Halep, on the other hand, has undergone nose surgery to improve her breathing and will not play again until next year.
In a post on Twitter on Thursday, the ninth-ranked Romanian wrote that she felt “completely exhausted” after her first-round loss to qualifier Daria Snigur at the US Open last month. She then decided to follow medical advice and have an operation to help her breathing issues that have affected her “for many years” and were getting worse.
Halep posted a picture in her tweet, showing her nose bandaged.
“I felt it’s the right time to do it and also to do something for myself as a person,” she wrote. “That is why I did also the [a]esthetic part.”
In the long Twitter post, Halep said she was close to ending her tennis career in February because she didn’t believe she could get back into the top 10. She said she rediscovered her passion for the sport after choosing to work with a new coach, Patrick Mouratoglou.
“2022, you have been an interesting year full of everything!” wrote Halep, who won the French Open in 2018 and Wimbledon in 2019. “See you on court, 2023! I feel I still have a lot to do on a tennis court and still have some goals.” AP
Image credits: AP