Roland Garros starts in shadow of coronavirus and 'ridiculous' cold

Roland Garros starts in shadow of coronavirus and 'ridiculous' cold

Cover-up: Russia's Margarita Gasparyan waits for the rain to stop.
Cover-up: Russia's Margarita Gasparyan waits for the rain to stop.

PARIS: Roland Garros got underway in the "ridiculous" cold of Paris on Sunday still in the grip of the coronavirus which organisers had hoped they would escape by unilaterally pushing back the clay court Grand Slam event by four months.

Play started with the tournament's new retractable roof closed over Court Philippe Chatrier.

Outside on the eerily quiet grounds of an event limited to just 1,000 fans it was a different story as temperatures dropped to a shivering 10 degrees (50F).

Only 15 minutes of play was possible before heavy rain brought a suspension with former world number one and recent US Open runner-up Victoria Azarenka complaining over the bitterly cold conditions.

"We are sitting like ducks," the two-time major winner raged after just three games of her opener against Danka Kovinic of Montenegro.

"It's too cold, it's eight degrees, I live in Florida. This is getting a little ridiculous. I'm not waiting," she said before storming off to seek shelter deep inside Court Suzanne Lenglen.

Opening day sees 2018 champion Simona Halep start her bid for a third major while 40-year-old Venus Williams kicks off her 23rd French Open.

Andy Murray takes on fellow three-time Grand Slam champion Stan Wawrinka in the day's marquee tie in a rematch of their epic 2017 semi-final duel.

However, it will be an eerily unfamiliar tournament, even for defending champion Rafael Nadal, chasing a 13th Paris title, and 2016 winner and world number one Novak Djokovic, as well as Serena Williams, pursuing an elusive 24th major.

A resurgence of Covid-19 cases has cut attendance to just 1,000 spectators a day. In 2019, more than 500,000 people watched the two-week tournament on site.

Organisers had hoped to welcome 20,000 fans a day but in the space of just a few weeks, that figure was quickly downsized to 11,500, then 5,000 before the French government slashed it to a 1,000 maximum.

"Tens of millions of euros have gone up in smoke," said French Tennis Federation (FFT) marketing chief Stephane Morel as he mourned the loss of ticket income.

Players, meanwhile, have been confined to two tournament hotels with tight restrictions on their movements.

It's at the hotels where they undergo Covid-19 testing, a source of controversy and recrimination in the build-up.

Last weekend, five players due to take part in men's qualifying were stood down.

Two had tested positive while three others had been in contact with coach Petar Popovic who also tested positive.

Popovic told L'Equipe it was a "scandal" and had "(Rafael) Nadal been in our shoes, he would have had the right to a second or third test".

On Friday, veteran Spaniard Fernando Verdasco said he was "outraged and frustrated" after being withdrawn following one failed Covid-19 test which he claimed fell between a steady stream of negative results.

Inside the grounds of Roland Garros, situated in the prosperous western district of Paris, there are further signs of the effect of the pandemic which pushed the event back from its traditional May-June slot.

Normally bustling shops, food outlets and other commercial stalls have been shuttered.

Everyone at the tournament, including players if they are not in action or in practice, is masked. Hand sanitisers dot the site.

On court Sunday, Halep, the top seed in the absence of world number one Ashleigh Barty, who opted not to defend her title on health grounds, takes on Spain's Sara Sorribes Tormo, ranked at 70.

Wimbledon champion Halep is the favourite especially with US Open champion Naomi Osaka missing through injury.

Former world number one Murray tackles 2015 champion Wawrinka in his first appearance in Paris in three years.

In 2017, the Swiss prevailed in a five-set semi-final, a match so gruelling that it contributed to Murray's lengthy battle with a hip injury which pushed him to the brink of retirement.

The day after sister Serena celebrated her 39th birthday, 40-year-old Venus Williams, who made her debut in Paris in 1997, takes on Anna Karolina Schmiedlova of Slovakia.

Nadal, bidding to win a 13th Roland Garros and move level with the absent Roger Federer on a record 20 majors, plays Monday.

However, the 34-year-old Spanish star says this year's tournament will be his "most difficult ever".

He has also complained about the new Wilson ball being used, claiming it's too heavy and potentially dangerous.

Nadal starts against Egor Gerasimov, the 83rd-ranked Belarusian.

Djokovic, chasing an 18th major, will get underway on Tuesday boasting a record in 2020 of 31 wins and just one loss due to his US Open default when he swiped a ball away in frustration and struck a line judge.

The 33-year-old Serb faces Sweden's Mikael Ymer in the first round.

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