Home

French Open fans livid with COVID curfew

Jerome PugmireAAP
Fans were forced to leave Novak Djokovic's clash with Matteo Berrettini due to a curfew in Paris.
Camera IconFans were forced to leave Novak Djokovic's clash with Matteo Berrettini due to a curfew in Paris. Credit: AP

Novak Djokovic's French Open quarter-final against Matteo Berrettini was suspended for about 22 minutes on Wednesday evening while thousands of spectators were cleared out because of an 11pm pandemic-related curfew in Paris.

Restrictions were loosened to allow 5,000 inside on Court Philippe-Chatrier rather than the 1,000 for the previous matches, and it was quite an atmosphere until the rule was imposed.

"The conditions were strange with the fans here and then the atmosphere was a bit different (afterward)," Djokovic said after winning 6-3 6-2 6-7 (5-7) 7-5 to reach his 40th grand slam semi-final.

"You have to find a different motivation because the energy from the fans is special."

Get in front of tomorrow's news for FREE

Journalism for the curious Australian across politics, business, culture and opinion.

READ NOW

Some disappointed fans jeered and even chanted "We've paid, we'll stay" as they refused to leave when supposed to at 10.45pm.

Shortly before 10.55pm, both players packed their bags and walked off down the tunnel while fans shouted out in frustration.

The Game AFL 2024

The top-ranked Djokovic was up 2-1 in sets and leading 3-2 in the fourth set when play was halted.

"Rip-off!" one said, while others blamed broadcaster Amazon or French Tennis Federation president Guy Forget.

Within a few minutes the main stadium was almost completely empty, although two angry fans continued to argue they had a right to stay until security officials finally ushered them away at 11.10pm.

Moments later, both players came back out to warm up amid a cathedral-like silence as the sound of ball hitting racket replaced the sometimes raucous atmosphere.

Because after being away from live sports for so long, an appreciative crowd was in the mood for entertainment.

Their unbridled enthusiasm turned sour at 10.30pm when chair umpire James Keothavong was roundly jeered for reminding the fans they had to leave in 15 minutes.

Most did not, but at just after 11.15pm the players had resumed their match.

The top-ranked Djokovic experienced something similar during the Australian Open in February, when fans needed to be ushered out during his victory over Taylor Fritz because of coronavirus restrictions in Melbourne.

Get the latest news from thewest.com.au in your inbox.

Sign up for our emails