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Russian players will also be banned from the 2022 Wimbledon

           Organizers of the Wimbledon Grand Slam tennis tournament are likely to impose a ban on Russian players next year if the Russian Army's campaign in Ukraine does not end. The decision by the All England Club and the Lawn Tennis Association has been strengthened by the International Olympic Committee's plan to ban Russian athletes for the 2024 qualifying e-vent. Both the organizations had banned players from Russia and Belarus from this year's 2022 Wimbledon.



           In view of the decision of the organizers of Wimbledon, the men's tennis organization ATP and the women's WTA organization announced that they would not give ranking points to the players in Wimbledon. The WTA also fined the two organizers a combined 1 million. The decision to ban Russian players at next year's Grand Slam is unlikely to be taken before March 2023. A Wimbledon official said the ban would remain in place until the British government's policy changed.

             A Russian tennis player has avoided a Wimbledon ban on all competitors from her country by changing her nationality to Georgian, according to a report in The Times newspaper. Natela Dzalamidze, a 29-year-old doubles player ranked No 44 in the world, will compete in the women's doubles with Serbia's Aleksandra Krunic when the tournament starts on June 27.

        Wimbledon organisers, the All England Club announced in April that players from Russia and Belarus would be barred from competing this year following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

         But an All England Club spokesman told The Times they were powerless to interfere in Dzalamidze's change of nationality, as this was a matter for the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) and the International Tennis Federation (ITF), and that she had satisfied the entry requirements.

        "Player nationality, defined as the flag they play under at professional events, is an agreed process that is governed by tours and the ITF," the spokesman said.

         Wimbledon's ban on players from Russia and Belarus provoked a hostile reaction elsewhere in the tennis world, with the WTA and the ATP, its male equivalent, stripping the tournament of ranking points.

         None of the other Grand Slam tournaments have followed Wimbledon's lead, with the US Open announcing last week that Russian and Belarus players will be allowed to compete under a neutral flag.

         Wimbledon's ban has ruled out a swathe of top players, including Daniil Medvedev, the men's world number one and the reigning US Open champion, as well as two-time major winner Victoria Azarenka.


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