<p>Elite tennis players should get vaccinated against Covid-19 or risk missing the Australian Open in January, Australian officials said Wednesday.</p>.<p>Some players, including men's No. 1 Novak Djokovic, have advocated that the decision to get the vaccine should be a personal choice.</p>.<p>But Australia's health minister Greg Hunt said the rules were straightforward: everyone arriving in the country needed to be double-vaccinated.</p>.<p>"Our rules are very clear, they apply to everyone without fear or favour," he said.</p>.<p>"It doesn't matter whether you are number one (tennis player) in the world or anything else, our rules are about protecting Australians and they apply to everybody."</p>.<p>Djokovic, who has won the Australian Open title a record nine times and shares the men's Grand Slam record of 20 titles with Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, hasn't confirmed whether he has been vaccinated for Covid-19.</p>.<p>If he doesn't get vaccinated, he risks missing the tournament he has won for the last three years.</p>.<p>Asked if he had a message for Djokovic, Australian immigration minister Alex Hawke indicated that tennis stars would have to follow the same rules as anyone else.</p>.<p>"I don't have a message to Novak, I have a message to everybody that wishes to visit Australia: you'll need to be double vaccinated," he said.</p>.<p>Ahead of the Australian Open earlier this year, all players had to quarantine for two weeks and be regularly tested under Australia's strict regulations on Covid-19 measures.</p>.<p>Most were allowed a limited time to practise, but any who tested positive or we deemed to be close contacts of a positive case — which in some cases meant simply being on the same charter flight — had to do a hard lockdown.</p>.<p>Those players weren't allowed to leave their hotel rooms.</p>.<p>There are plans to have crowds at the Australian Open.</p>.<p><strong>Check out the latest videos from <i data-stringify-type="italic">DH</i>:</strong></p>
<p>Elite tennis players should get vaccinated against Covid-19 or risk missing the Australian Open in January, Australian officials said Wednesday.</p>.<p>Some players, including men's No. 1 Novak Djokovic, have advocated that the decision to get the vaccine should be a personal choice.</p>.<p>But Australia's health minister Greg Hunt said the rules were straightforward: everyone arriving in the country needed to be double-vaccinated.</p>.<p>"Our rules are very clear, they apply to everyone without fear or favour," he said.</p>.<p>"It doesn't matter whether you are number one (tennis player) in the world or anything else, our rules are about protecting Australians and they apply to everybody."</p>.<p>Djokovic, who has won the Australian Open title a record nine times and shares the men's Grand Slam record of 20 titles with Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, hasn't confirmed whether he has been vaccinated for Covid-19.</p>.<p>If he doesn't get vaccinated, he risks missing the tournament he has won for the last three years.</p>.<p>Asked if he had a message for Djokovic, Australian immigration minister Alex Hawke indicated that tennis stars would have to follow the same rules as anyone else.</p>.<p>"I don't have a message to Novak, I have a message to everybody that wishes to visit Australia: you'll need to be double vaccinated," he said.</p>.<p>Ahead of the Australian Open earlier this year, all players had to quarantine for two weeks and be regularly tested under Australia's strict regulations on Covid-19 measures.</p>.<p>Most were allowed a limited time to practise, but any who tested positive or we deemed to be close contacts of a positive case — which in some cases meant simply being on the same charter flight — had to do a hard lockdown.</p>.<p>Those players weren't allowed to leave their hotel rooms.</p>.<p>There are plans to have crowds at the Australian Open.</p>.<p><strong>Check out the latest videos from <i data-stringify-type="italic">DH</i>:</strong></p>