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Monterrey Open 2022: Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina Refuses To Play Russian Anastasia Potapova Unless Tours Act

Top-seed Elina Svitolina is scheduled to play Anastasia Potapova in a Round of 32 women’s singles encounter at Monterrey Open 2022 in Mexico.

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Elina Svitolina is a two-time Grand Slam semifinalist with 16 career tour-level singles titles.
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Top-seeded Elina Svitolina, a 27-year-old professional tennis player from Ukraine, stated she will withdraw from the Monterrey Open 2022 rather than face a Russian opponent in Mexico unless the governing bodies follow the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) lead and insist that players from Russia and Belarus are only identified as ‘neutral athletes’. (More Tennis News)  

Svitolina wrote Monday on Twitter that she did not want to play her opening-round contest against Anastasia Potapova “nor any other match against Russian or Belarussian tennis players until” the WTA women’s tour, ATP men’s tour and International Tennis Federation “follow the recommendations of the IOC” and bar those countries' competitors from using any national symbols, colors, flags or anthems.

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The Russian military assault on Ukraine was on its fifth day. “I do not blame any of the Russian athletes,” Svitolina wrote. “They are not responsible for the invasion of our motherland.” Svitolina is a two-time Grand Slam semifinalist with 16 career tour-level singles titles who has been ranked as high as No. 3 and is currently No. 15.

Another tennis player from Ukraine, 32-year-old Lesia Tsurenko, wrote on Twitter that she and others “would like to express our great surprise and dissatisfaction with the lack of any response to the situation with our Motherland.”

Tsurenko, a quarterfinalist at the 2018 US Open who’s been ranked as high as No. 23 and is No. 127 this week, called on the WTA to immediately condemn the Russian government. The ITF said it has cancelled events on Russian soil “indefinitely,” and no events would be scheduled in Belarus this year.

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It also postponed an event scheduled for Ukraine in April, citing “heightened security concerns.”

“This is a fast-evolving situation. We are constantly monitoring events and remain in active discussion with the ITF tennis family, the ITF Board and security experts to decide and align around our next course of action. We stand united with the population of Ukraine,” the ITF said in a statement issued Monday.

“Right now, our priority remains the safety of all those participating in our events. We will of course be providing more information as soon as possible.” The WTA and ATP did not immediately respond to requests for comment from The Associated Press.

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