Djokovic, who took the
coronavirus test on Monday after returning to Belgrade from the Croatia leg
of the event, is expected to announce the result later on Tuesday.
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The debacle of the Adria Tour
organised by world number one Novak Djokovic was the worst imaginable outcome
as several participants tested positive for Covid-19 during and after the
event, his brother Djordje said on Tuesday. Djokovic, who took the coronavirus
test on Monday after returning to Belgrade from the Croatia leg of the event,
is expected to announce the result later on Tuesday.
“This was the worst possible scenario,” the
event’s director Djordje Djokovic told Serbia’s Prva Television. “Novak was not
obliged to take the test in Croatia as he had no symptoms. He took the test
straight after his flight landed in Belgrade. Around 100 people were tested and
I was hard-hit by news that some of them came back positive, especially my
childhood friend Borna Coric. We wish all of them a speedy and painless
recovery.”
Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov pulled
out of the tournament in Croatia’s coastal resort of Zadar after feeling unwell
following his match with Coric on Saturday. He informed the organisers ahead of
Sunday’s final he had tested positive upon his return to his Monte Carlo
residence, leading to the cancellation of the showdown between Djokovic and
Russian Andrey Rublev.
Croatian Coric tested positive on
Monday as did Serb Viktor Troicki, who did not take part in the Zadar leg of
the Adria Tour but featured in the first leg staged at Novak Djokovic’s tennis
centre in Belgrade on June 13 and 14. Djokovic’s fitness coach Marco Panichi
and Dimitrov’s coach Christian Groh also tested positive.
Djordje Djokovic said he had made
the decision to cancel the Zadar final in order to contain the damage. “We
wanted to protect every player and fan after learning that Dimitrov tested
positive. It was a charity event and all we wanted was to play tennis and give
the fans a good show,” he said.
A sellout 4,000 crowd attended
both days of the Belgrade event and as many turned up to watch the Zadar event,
with its Visnjik tennis complex half-full after Croatia’s authorities ordered
spectators to implement social distancing.
The third leg which was due in
Montenegro on June 27 and 28 was scrapped during the Belgrade event amid
coronavirus concerns voiced by the Montenegrin government. The final leg
scheduled for Bosnia’s city Banja Luka on July 3 and 4 is likely to be
cancelled, although the tour’s organisers are yet to confirm its fate.
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