French Open plans for fans not empty seats

Australia's Ashleigh Barty clenches her fist after scoring a point against Amanda Anisimova of the U.S. during their semifinal match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris, Friday, June 7, 2019. [AP Photo/Michel Euler]

Roland Garros chiefs insisted the French Open, delayed until September due to the coronavirus pandemic, will have fans attending even if they still have to abide by social distancing rules.

The claycourt Grand Slam, which should now have been into its first week under its traditional schedule, was pushed back by four months because of the outbreak.

However, tickets bought for the event in its May-June slot were reimbursed rather than transferred, prompting fears the tournament, now due to start on September 20, would be played behind closed doors.

“In the autumn, we will play Roland Garros with an optimum spectator capacity which allows fans to respect social distancing,” Jean-Francois Vilotte, the director-general of the French Tennis Federation (FFT), told AFP.

A working group has already been created consisting of the ministries of sports and foreign affairs as well as Roland Garros officials and health bodies.

For the players, “the prize money is very important” as is the eco-system of tennis in France for which Roland Garros accounts for 80% of revenue.

If fans are to be welcome at the rescheduled tournament, then tickets would have to go on resale.

“We have set ourselves a deadline (for resale) ... but you will not know it,” added Vilotte. 

“It will be an exceptional tournament anyway,” he said, adding the organisation was working on holding a “postponed tournament” and not a “downgraded” version. In other words, juniors, singles, doubles and wheelchair tennis events will still be staged. International tennis has been suspended globally since mid-March while Wimbledon was cancelled for the first time since World War II.