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Exclusive: WTA looks to start 2021 season on January 4 outside Australia

Tennis - Australian Open - First Round

By Sudipto Ganguly

MUMBAI (Reuters) - The WTA is planning to start the 2021 season in the first week of January outside Australia before the players travel to Melbourne for quarantine ahead of the Grand Slam, women's tour chief Steve Simon told Reuters.

"We're looking right now at hopefully close to finalising in the next week or so the ability to stage some events in the week of Jan. 4 to start the year," he said by telephone from the United States.

Simon did not provide details of where the tour might start.

Normally both the WTA and the men's ATP professional tours kick off their seasons in Australia, and in 2020 the WTA had events in Brisbane, Shenzen and Auckland starting on Jan. 6.

But it is unlikely to take place in either China or New Zealand which, like Australia, have strict health measures for international arrivals to curb the risk of imported COVID-19 cases.

Both the WTA and the ATP are expected to confirm their 2021 tour calendars once the details of the Australian Open are approved by the local authorities.

The Australian Open looks likely to be pushed back from its scheduled Jan. 18 start as Tennis Australia continues talks with local government over COVID-19 protocols to be established for Melbourne Park.

Negotiations over when the players will arrive in Australia and what they will be allowed to do during their 14 days of quarantine have dragged out over the last few weeks but Simon was confident the tournament would go ahead.

"The Australian Open, we're expecting it to happen," he said.

"Obviously the Australian Open will come with a quarantine period to enter Australia so it does create challenges around the month of January."

Following the quarantine period in Australia, the tour has planned tune-up tournaments, the first Grand Slam and then will return as closely as possible to its traditional calendar, Simon added.

The WTA was working with its members and Tennis Australia to firm up plans, Simon said."I think we're again getting to a good place and we'll be able to start the year and then transition into Australia and then have a great year," Simon added.

(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly; editing by Nick Mulvenney, Peter Rutherford and Edwina Gibbs)