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French Open to avoid Adria Tour debacle: Forget,

PARIS • French Open organisers are taking every precaution to ensure the Grand Slam does not meet the same fate as Novak Djokovic's Adria Tour, which was abandoned after several players tested positive for Covid-19, tournament director Guy Forget said.

Djokovic came under fire after the charity event was played in front of packed crowds in Serbia and Croatia and saw players hugging at the net and posing for pictures together.

The world No. 1, Grigor Dimitrov, Borna Coric and Viktor Troicki have all tested positive for the virus.

The French Open will allow up to 60 per cent of the usual capacity inside Roland Garros when the clay-court tournament starts on Sept 27 and Forget said there was no chance of them repeating the mistakes of the Adria Tour.

"Maybe some people were overconfident there," he said. "Luckily no one got hurt really bad but even a few cases is too much and we want to avoid that. We want to reassure everyone that having people getting ill will be terrible for us. Let's be really careful, really cautious."

France began easing restrictions in May but has been reporting over 500 cases daily in recent days.

Protective masks will be mandatory for anyone on the move inside Roland Garros and they will be recommended for those sitting courtside.

The French Tennis Federation expects some 20,000 spectators a day during the early stages of the two-week tournament and about 10,000 per day on the final weekend.

Forget said a successful event needed to have some kind of a crowd.

"We all see soccer on television, it's wonderful but something is missing without the crowds," the former world No. 4 said.

"We are working closely with the administration, the government, to make sure we can provide some crowd while still following very strict security measures."

The US Open in New York, which is scheduled to start on Aug 31, will have no spectators and operate under strict health protocols, including limiting the size of each player's entourage.

Forget said French Open organisers were not planning anything as strict and were even hoping to ease restrictions. "Luckily things are a bit more flexible in Europe and in France, especially," the Frenchman said.

REUTERS