The Tennis Thread

He’s got an interim injunction to remain in Australia until Monday anyway. Full hearing of his case then.

World No.1 tennis player Novak Djokovic will stay in Melbourne until Monday after launching a last-minute bid in the Federal Circuit Court to stop the federal government from deporting him before the Australian Open begins.

Lawyers for the Serbian star appeared in an online hearing on Thursday, after he had his visa cancelled upon arrival in Australia and was sent to immigration detention at the Park Hotel in Carlton.

As the hearing continued into the evening after two earlier adjournments, Djokovic’s lawyers secured an interim injunction that prevents authorities deporting the tennis star until at least 4pm on Monday, when a more substantive hearing is scheduled.

Barrister Christopher Tran, acting for the federal government, said the government did not oppose an injunction against immediate deportation. Judge Anthony Kelly adjourned the case to be heard from 10am on Monday - one week before the Australian Open starts.

Djokovic’s legal challenge began on Thursday afternoon, but Judge Kelly twice adjourned the hearing because he hadn’t received the written material filed by Djokovic’s lawyers.

Judge Kelly said he was “strongly inclined” to hear the case speedily and was open to having Djokovic give evidence, if necessary, in an online hearing.

But the judge also warned that he would not be bound by Tennis Australia’s preference that the issue be resolved by Tuesday. Tournament organisers would need time to find a replacement player if Djokovic doesn’t compete.

“If I can say with the respect necessary, the tail won’t be wagging the dog here,” Judge Kelly said.

Earlier, Judge Kelly asked if the world No.1 had access to a tennis court for practice at his hotel.

Nick Wood, SC, for Djokovic, said he was open to discussions with authorities in an attempt to find a way for his client to play, but said resolving the visa dispute was the key.

“But as I sit here, the absence of a visa, if the cancellation decision is valid, is an insuperable obstacle to Mr Djokovic competing in the tournament,” he said.

Mr Wood later asked Judge Kelly for an injunction that would allow Djokovic to stay in Melbourne until the judge’s final ruling.

However, the judge suggested that request was an “overreach”, though he said it would be a concern if the tennis star was deported before his case was decided.

Mr Wood also requested the case be finalised before the Open began on January 17, however Judge Kelly said the Federal Circuit Court was notorious for cases to result in a “cascading series of appeals”.

According to the federal government, the approval for the visas was an automated process and it was always up to individuals to prove their vaccination status or valid exemptions on arrival. Border Force regularly turns away people who cannot meet their visa requirements.

“Rules are rules and there are no special cases,” Prime Minister Scott Morrison said. “I want to thank the border officers for doing their job.”

He said strong border controls had protected Australia from the worst of the pandemic and that, ultimately, it was the responsibility of travellers to adhere to the rules.

“It is simply a matter of following the rules,” Mr Morrison said. “Over the next few hours … that event will play out as it should.”

Ranked No.1 in the world, Djokovic has won the Australian Open nine times and a 10th title would take him past rivals Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, who are tied with him for the men’s record of 20 career grand slam wins.

Djokovic and his support staff arrived at Melbourne Airport late on Wednesday night and left about 10am on Thursday. Shortly afterward, media gathered outside the Park Hotel in Carlton, the immigration facility where he is being detained.

Legal sources told The Age that Djokovic’s lawyers would need to highlight a substantive error in the decision to cancel his visa for him to stay in Australia, that it would be insufficient to review the decision again and that the standing as the world’s best men’s player would carry no clout in court.

Carina Ford, an immigration law specialist with no connection to the case, said Djokovic’s lawyers would be mindful that anyone who has a visa cancelled can be barred from reapplying to enter Australia for three years, unless they have a waiver.

“It does have serious consequences,” she said.

Djokovic has expressed anti-vaccination sentiments in the past, but believed he would be allowed into Australia after a letter of support from Tennis Australia.

Federal health authorities told Tennis Australia boss Craig Tiley on two occasions in writing that people who were not vaccinated and had contracted COVID-19 in the past six months would not be granted quarantine-free travel to Australia.

The emergence of two letters from the Department of Health and Health Minister Greg Hunt in November casts doubt over why tennis star Novak Djokovic was granted an exemption to play in the Australian Open by health panels set up by Tennis Australia and the Victorian government.

According to multiple sources, the world No.1 men’s player applied for an exemption on the basis that he had contracted COVID-19 in the previous six months.

In a letter sent to Mr Tiley on November 18, Department of Health First Assistant Secretary Lisa Schofield said that “people who have previously had COVID-19 and not received a vaccine dose are not considered fully vaccinated”.

Ms Schofield said such people would “not be approved for quarantine-free entry, regardless of whether they have received foreign vaccination exemptions”.

The same lads who fanatically support Djokovic for deliberately endangering the health of the Australian people were all cheering on this forum the night referee Alan Mills ejected Tim Henman from the mixed doubles at Wimbledon when Henman accidentally hit a ball girl when he struck a ball cross court in frustration after losing a point.

Hypocrites.

Who’s this Paul Joseph Watson character?

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If Djokovic has been a set up from the very start it places a massive asterisk over all his titles. The whole point of a professional sport like tennis is that scores are supposed to start at love.

But even at that, there is no love for Djokovic.

Hopefully common sense will prevail here.

The reaction when he lifts the trophy will be something else.

Djokovic would remind you of Henry Sellers crying to himself thinking he was more important than everybody else, and then jumping through a window.

I thought they did already

:grinning:

I’m not sure why the Head of State of Serbia, President Vucic is looking for a meeting with this PM Morrison chap from Australia. For a matter of such diplomatic importance, he should be going right to the top, to the Head of State of Australia.

Scum.

How science sceptic Novak Djokovic became a pin-up for the anti-vaxx movement

Djokovic is not likely to give up the beliefs that have left him barred from entering Australia

BySimon Briggs, TENNIS CORRESPONDENT6 January 2022 • 1:06pm

How science sceptic Novak Djokovic became a pin-up for the anti-vaxx movement

Djokovic is a stubborn character, used to getting his own way, and cut off from normal society by his very success

Want to know how Novak Djokovic became seemingly so vulnerable to quackery of all kinds, and a poster boy for the anti-vaxx movement? You only have to read his autobiography, Serve To Win. This peculiar book is full of new-age jibber-jabber, with chapter titles such as “How Opening My Mind Changed My Body”.

Here is an anti-scientific crank hiding in plain sight. Our personalities, they say, are formed by the stories we tell ourselves. So it is interesting to see how Djokovic’s frames his book. He mentions the NATO bombing raids on Belgrade during his childhood, which is invariably how TV documentaries about him begin. But these elements of the story are a sideshow beside the main thrust: how he suffered from recurring physical ailments – allergies, breathing difficulties, blocked sinuses – until he gave up gluten.

Nothing especially weird so far - until he explains how his gluten intolerance was diagnosed. A Serbian nutritionist called Dr Igor Cetojevic asked Djokovic to hold his right arm out at right angles and resist the pressure as he pushed down on it. Then the exercise was repeated, only this time while Djokovic held a slice of bread against his stomach. “I was noticeably weaker,” writes Djokovic, who adds that “kinesiological arm testing [has] long been used as a diagnostic tool by natural healers.” Yes, and mediums have long claimed to speak to the dead.

Suffice to say, this branch of alternative medicine – so-called “applied kinesiology” – remains largely unsupported by any scientific evidence. And that was only the start of the rabbit hole. “Growing up under communism, you are not taught to be open-minded,” Djokovic writes, a couple of pages later, before copying out a page of claptrap from traditional Chinese medicine. “Each organ in our bodies is undergoing repair in roughly this order: Lungs 3-5am, Large Intestine 5-7am, Stomach 7-9am …” You get the picture.

Here is the new Novak. The seeker after truth. The lover of nature. Here is a man who broke up his visits to Wimbledon with trips to the nearby Buddhapadipa Temple to meditate by a lake. A man who revealed two years ago that he has a “friend” in Melbourne’s Botanical Gardens – “a Brazilian fig tree that I like to climb”. Yes, Djokovic’s jet-setting spiritualism might sound charming in itself. But its side-effect has been credulousness.

Serve To Win describes a so-called “researcher” taking two glasses of water and directing loving energy towards one, while swearing angrily at the other. “After a few days … [the angry glass] was tinted slightly green … the other glass was still bright and crystal clear”. Harmless, perhaps, if deeply dippy. But then, last year, Djokovic could be found hosting a former estate agent called Chervin Jafarieh on his Instagram Live channel. Jafarieh was selling bottles of Advanced Brain Nutrients at $50 apiece, which – like Djokovic’s resistance to the Covid vaccination – sounded contrary to the interests of public health.

Serbia's Novak Djokovic reacts as he takes part in tennis match during a charity exhibition hosted by him, in Belgrade on June 12, 2020. - Novak Djokovic has also tested positive for coronavirus on June 23, 2020

Djokovic taking part in his charity exhibition in Belgrade in June 2020. He and several players tested positive for Covid afterwards and the event was criticised for a lack of social distancing CREDIT: AFP via Getty Images)

Djokovic eats some grass after his 2014 Wimbledon win

Djokovic eats some grass after his 2014 Wimbledon win CREDIT: Reuters

To return to the present, and the 2022 Australian Open, many have wondered why Djokovic doesn’t just put his career first and receive a jab. But you can see that his sceptical position on conventional medicine, and his enthusiasm for alternative treatments, lie right at the heart of his self-image. These are not positions to be easily abandoned. Especially for a man who has climbed to No1 in the world by following his instincts. The trouble is that, for all the power of human intuition, our instincts are notoriously unreliable. There is a clear story arc at work here, all leading to an interrogation room in Melbourne’s Tullamarine Airport.

Following his famous meeting with Dr Cetojevic in the summer 2010, Djokovic won the Davis Cup with his Serbian team-mates, and then set out on the first great season of his career. The manner of the diagnosis is significant. Had Djokovic discovered his gluten intolerance via a conventional blood-test, he might never have decided that alternative medicine represents a great untapped resource. From there, it has been an ongoing evolution to views such as the one that Djokovic expressed in a 2018 interview with Shortlist magazine. “I believe that it is our mission to reach a higher frequency through self-care by exploring and respecting our own avatar, our body and, by doing that, raising the vibration of the planet."

Have Djokovic’s eccentricities hindered his career? From time to time. Take the wilderness period around 2017, when he struggled with an elbow issue before finally undergoing surgery in February of the following year. When I interviewed him about his comeback, in November 2018, he admitted that he had put the procedure off for as long as he could. “I was trying to avoid getting on that table because I am not a fan of surgeries or medications,” Djokovic said. “I am just trying to be as natural as possible, and I believe that our bodies are self-healing mechanisms … I just cried for two or three days afterwards … Every time I thought about it, I felt like I had failed myself.”

The operation proved triumphantly successful, allowing Djokovic to end a two-year dry spell by winning Wimbledon five months later. It is also worth noting that, at around the same time, he was one of the most influential voices within the governance structure of the ATP Tour. One of his suggestions was to equip each tournament with a mobile pod which – using some combination of cryotherapy or air pressure – was supposed to rejuvenate your muscles. In the end, this large, expensive and unwieldy item had to be crossed off the to-do list, partly because it was deemed unsafe by several countries.

And so we return to the dark side of this whole peculiar tale. Were Djokovic just a journeyman player, his pseudo-scientific beliefs would be no more than a bizarre footnote. As it is, he is a powerful role model, particularly in the Balkans. Thousands of people have probably emulated his stance on vaccines. Some are likely to suffer consequences as a result. As for Djokovic himself, he is clearly experiencing some turbulence of his own this week. But do not expect him to change. He is a stubborn character, used to getting his own way, and cut off from normal society by his very success.

He will not easily give up the philosophy that – for better and for worse – has made him the man he is.

Fuck Novax. The law is the law. Piss off and stay at home. He should never have been let in. Egomaniac.

Only goes to show what a mess has been made of this. Another player with the same exemption and visa as Djokovic was allowed in and has played in a tournament has now been locked up in the same place a Djokovic. Incompetent idiots.

PM Morrison has probably only just got wind that this no mark was in the country.

Tennis Australia appear to be the ones at fault here

What happened is typical of management in organisations with no balls, instead of saying to Djokovic and others look only vaccinated players can play in the tournament they made up some quasi exemption to make it look like he could play and then when he was stopped at the airport then Tennis Australia could put their hands up and say not us.

The only thing is that I am surprised they Australian government both local and Federal are letting it drag on this long because it will bring into focus that detention centre where Djokovic is being held. Already there are reports saying people have been held in that detention centre for 18 months now.

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It was Tennis Australia and the State of Victoria who seemingly came up with this Quasi Exemption only in the last month to allow Djokovic in. Federal Government of Australia stepped in and said it’s not happening. If you want clarification on something, go straight to the top. Tennis Australia thinking they can dictate border control and customs.

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Did the cat get your tongue, @BruidheanChaorthainn?