When Simona Halep confirmed on Monday she was joining five other top-10 US Open refuseniks, all of them from outside the United States, the tournament organisers could do no more than sigh, reshuffle the women’s draw yet again and hope this was the end of it.
It probably is, given most of the serious contenders have arrived in New York to play in the rescheduled Cincinnati Open, the on-site warm-up event that starts on Thursday. However, in the unlikely event Serena Williams, Naomi Osaka or Coco Gauff were to pull out, the US Open would be in serious personality deficit. They are the big names left in the women’s draw of a tournament whose nervous organisers – naturally concerned about taking a $120m hit through potential lost global television revenue – agonised before deciding to go ahead without fans in the cavernous stadiums of the Billie Jean King Center.
The attention was always going to be on Williams, who needs one more title to equal Margaret Court’s record of 24 majors, but who last won there in 2014 and turns 39 next month. The uncertainty around her grew in Lexington, Kentucky, last week when Shelby Rogers won 1-6, 6-4, 7-6 (5) in the semi-finals of the inaugural Top Seed Open to become the first player outside the top 100 to beat her in the past eight years.
The scale of the damage in Queens, meanwhile, is already significant. With two weeks to go before what is bound to be a strange opening day, they have already lost the defending champion, Bianca Andreescu, and the world No 1, Ashleigh Barty, along with Elina Svitolina, Kiki Bertens, Belinda Bencic and now Halep, as well as a slew of lesser players.
Johanna Konta is one beneficiary of the chaos, moving up to eighth seed on the latest list.
Halep, a semi-finalist five years ago, probably would have started favourite in a shredded field, as she is in excellent form. Yet she pulled out 24 hours after beating Elise Mertens, 6-2, 7-5, in convincing style to win the Prague Open. The Russian Irina Khromacheva replaces her.
Halep revealed before Sunday’s final she has trained only on clay during the sport’s five-month shutdown and will now continue her preparations for the Rome and French Opens next month.
It never looked likely she would risk a trip to New York, given her concerns about the continued and random spread of Covid-19 across the United States and it seems she was unconvinced that even the rigid safety precautions the United States Tennis Association has insisted on would be sufficient.
Angela Buxton, a British tennis player and former doubles partner of Althea Gibson, has died at the age of 85. Buxton paired up with Gibson as the American became the first black person to win a major in 1956.
The ITF announced Buxton's death on Monday, describing her as an early pioneer of equal rights. Together with Gibson, she won doubles titles at the French Open and Wimbledon in 1956. Buxton also reached the singles final at SW19 that year, losing to Shirley Fry.
Gibson went on to win singles titles at the French Open in 1956, Wimbledon in 1957 and the US Open in 1958. Her partner was forced into retirement at the end of the 1957 season, aged just 22.
Katrina Adams, a former tennis player who has promoted equal rights in the game, said Buxton championed the friendship and support of Althea Gibson during an era of intense racial divisions. Buxton had Jewish heritage and faced anti-Semitism throughout her career.
The Liverpool-born player was one of the first to be inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 1981. Buxton was also inducted into the Black Tennis Hall of Fame in 2015 after raising over $1m to financially support Gibson before her death in 2003.
'I wish [tennis] still wasn't such an elite sport', Buxton said in 2004, while claiming she was never granted All-England Club membership. "I wish we could bring it down to a common baseline. It's going that way [but] it's still not there". Associated Press
“After weighing up all the factors involved and with the exceptional circumstances in which we are living, I have decided that I will not travel to New York to play the US Open,” Halep said on Twitter.
“I always said I would put my health at the heart of my decision and I therefore prefer to stay and train in Europe. I know the USTA and the WTA have worked tirelessly to put on a safe event and I wish everyone there a successful tournament.”
On the men’s side, Kei Nishikori, a US Open finalist six years ago, withdrew on Sunday from the Cincinnati Open after testing positive for coronavirus and is almost certain to rule himself out of the grand slam.
Then, when calm seemed to have returned, it was announced Taipei’s Hsieh Su-wei and the Australian Priscilla Hon had pulled out. This is a slowly leaking ship, if ever there was.
When the USTA shortly afterwards cancelled all national junior events until 12 October and adult category 1 tournaments until the end of the year, it did nothing to lighten the mood.