Skip to Content
Newsletter

Bummer Vibes at the Happy Slam

[vc_empty_space height="5px"]

By Ben Rothenberg

[vc_empty_space height="15px"]Taking viewers on an antipodean adventure, the Australian Open prides itself on turning the sporting globe—and frowns—upside down.

The year’s first Grand Slam event has made good vibes its calling card, sending scenes of Southern Hemisphere sunshine to viewers in the cold, dark north. As it grew in stature toward parity with the other Grand Slam events, the Australian Open capitalized on a sound bite from one of its favorite adopted sons.

“It’s kind of like ‘The Happy Slam,’ so to speak, because people are happy to play again, happy to see each other,” Roger Federer said in 2007, shortly before winning his third of six Australian Open titles. “It’s a great, great tournament. Things are really easy here: hotels close to the courts, always a lot of fans on the grounds.”

Well, the hotels are still just as nearby, but this year there won’t be as many fans on the grounds, with ticket sales for each session being capped when they’ve reached 50 percent due to a massive surge of coronavirus cases in and around Melbourne.

While the stands are set to be half empty, the less quantifiable “happy” metrics feel far, far below that mark, dimmed less by the ceaseless pandemic and more by the plight of one man who turned Melbourne into a gloomy reverse Omelas of sorts with an exuberant Instagram post.

Novak Djokovic’s announcement on Jan. 4 that he was coming to Australia with an “exemption permission” immediately turned Australia an angry shade of outback-soil-red. Australians, who have taken immense national pride in their acceptance of strict pandemic protocols that led to fewer deaths than in most any comparable country, quickly rose up in anger against the news on both traditional and social media. 

Politicians, quickly sensing the near-unanimity of anti-Djokovic fervor, lined up for eager whacks at the piñata. By the time Djokovic was on his flight from Dubai to Melbourne, the government was ready to scrutinize his documents, and found his excuses for showing up to the country’s doorstep unvaccinated wanting. After being detained for hours in the airport, Djokovic’s visa was canceled, and he was sent to a detention center primarily used to house stranded refugees in legal limbo.

While Djokovic should shoulder nearly all the blame for stubbornly refusing to get vaccinated (at least 97 of the ATP top 100 are currently vaccinated), he was also set up to fail by Tennis Australia, who completely misread the appetite their country would have for welcoming an unvaccinated champion (who was never all that popular here to begin with despite his dominance in Melbourne). Craig Tiley built an entire vaccination exemption process to try to get Djokovic into the country through a side door, and in carving that hole into the structure of his event he let in a cloud of resentment that has darkened the mood here considerably.

To be sure, the warm vibes were still present when I landed in Melbourne to cover the tennis here for the 10th time. In the first week of the season, Rafael Nadal played a doubles match as part of a small ATP tournament held in Melbourne Park. The organizers put the match on small Court 13, giving the few hundred fans in attendance an experience akin to seeing a rock star play an acoustic set at a neighborhood coffee shop. 

Away from the headlines, there will be more happy moments like that for fans around the grounds, who will get to watch world-class tennis up close, something many of them didn’t feel comfortable doing here last year before vaccines were available. Fans at home, too, can lock into great first-round matches (Raducanu-Stephens, you guys!).

Djokovic is in the draw too, for now. He won an appeal against his deportation on Monday, only for Alex Hawke, the Minister for Immigration, to re-cancel his visa on Friday. Djokovic is challenging this order, too. But if he loses his appeal, the tournament might finally win back its own.[vc_empty_space height="10px"]Above: Getty[vc_column width="1/6"][vc_tweetmeme share_via="racqetmagazine"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_facebook type="button_count"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_empty_space height="45px"][vc_column width="1/4"][vc_column width="1/2"]

BACK IN STOCK
Melbourne Parq Tee

[vc_btn title="BUY NOW" style="outline" shape="square" color="success" size="lg" align="center" button_block="true" link="url:https%3A%2F%2Fracquetmag.com%2Fproduct%2Fmelbourne-park-tee%2F|title:GET%20IT%20NOW||"][vc_column width="1/4"]

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More Stories

Is it OK for a Player to Disappear?

The conversation around mental health has helped transform the sport, but as openness becomes the norm, another question is beginning to surface: Can vulnerability remain meaningful if athletes no longer feel free to withhold it?

July 14, 2026

Postcard from Wimbledon: Practice Is a Privilege

In this letter of recommendation, our correspondent reports from the All England's Aorangi Park, where the press can sit and absorb a sense of wonder and astonishment and porous, melancholy outsiderness. Where we are reminded, after all, that we are mere witnesses to these shapes and strokes of beauty, and not their arbiters.

July 6, 2026

How Wimbledon Stays Elite, but Not Elitist

Wimbledon Court is the All England Lawn Tennis Club’s effort to give New Yorkers the chance to play on a rare surface in the city’s backyard. It’s also part of a larger effort to ensure the tournament delivers on its promise of “the pinnacle of sport” and broadens the tennis fanbase to the next generation.

June 29, 2026

Postcard from Mallorca

The racquet-sports draw to this Balearic gem is no longer for rabid junior prospects only—now it’s the grown ups with a taste for design hotels, regional hospitality and a seamless itinerary of sport and wellness who are recalibrating the island’s racquet-sport vibe.

June 28, 2026

The Art of Staying Present

A Canadian artist finds inspiration on Texas tennis courts

June 26, 2026

Spoils Rotten (and Good)

The Best and Worst Trophies on Tour

June 17, 2026