The conflict in Ukraine and the plight of its tennis gamers have to be on the forefront of discussions at Wimbledon, not the Grand Slam’s resolution to reverse its ban on Russian and Belarusian gamers, former world primary Andy Murray mentioned.
Wimbledon was the one Grand Slam to ban rivals from Russia and its ally Belarus in 2022 after the invasion, which Moscow calls a “special operation”, however has mentioned they might return as neutrals this 12 months.
“What’s really important is to continue to talk about what’s happening in Ukraine now, not focusing on a few tennis players and a few athletes who may or may not be able to play major sporting events,” Murray instructed the Tennis Majors web site.
“It’s a difficult decision for Wimbledon. The rest of sport had gone in a completely different direction to them, which made it hard. But I don’t think this should be so much about that.
“It’s distracting a little bit from actually what’s taking place. You don’t want that to happen. You want the actual issue to be at the forefront of all of these discussions.”
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Several Ukrainian gamers have spoken about how troublesome it’s to proceed competing whereas their nation is at conflict.
“I’ve seen some of the female players have spoken out about how difficult they found it and maybe felt like they could have had more support through that,” Murray mentioned.
“You need to understand their perspective as well, and not just the players that weren’t allowed to play last year.
“There are Ukrainian players whose families (are affected) and they’re going through unbelievably difficult times. That’s what’s important.”
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com