Australian Open boss Craig Tiley details reason for Bernard Tomic snub

Australian Open boss Craig Tiley has revealed why Bernard Tomic missed out on a qualifying wildcard for the grand slam.

Despite a rankings rebound of kinds, through which Tomic rose from world No. 825 to No. 462 prior to now 12 months, the 30-year-old Queenslander was missed for a wildcard in favour of a collection of kids ranked under him.

Speaking to reporters on Monday, Tiley defined the vary of things that contributed to the choice.

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“Our team that looks at the decision has a team of people that looks at the decision of wildcards,” Tiley mentioned.

“(They look at) the player coming in, the strength of their play, what events they’ve been playing, how much they’ve been playing, are they the younger part of our future generation. There’s many factors that go into it.”

Tiley mentioned the main cause for the Tomic snub was the rising variety of promising Aussie children all vying to participate in qualifying.

“One thing that’s great is we’ve got a new problem – we’ve got a lot more Australian players to choose from, and that’s a great problem to have,” he mentioned.

19-year-old’s James McCabe (No. 406) and Philip Sekulic (No. 543), 18-year-old’s Derek Pham (No. 1017), Jeremy Jin (No. 990), Edward Winter (No. 672) and American Bruno Kuzuhara (No. 636), who received the Australia Open boys title final yr, all earned qualifying wildcards forward of Tomic.

They’ll be joined by 21-year-olds Dane Sweeny (No. 249) and Tristan Schoolkate (No. 367) and 23-year-old Adam Walton (No. 432) in qualifying, which runs from the January 9-12 at Melbourne Park.

Tomic, who reportedly didn’t apply for a wildcard however may nonetheless have been awarded one, informed First Serve he would use the snub as motivation.

“I’m not expecting any favours. I’m going to prove my point and earn my way,” Tomic mentioned on his technique to Doha.

“I understand Tennis Australia has made their decision. It’s good to see the young tennis players getting an opportunity.

“I’m at a place in my life where I don’t complain anymore. I’m focused and I’ve been training hard.

“I’ll let my tennis do the talking. Last quarter of 2022, I won three tournaments and made four finals.

“This year is my year, if no one is going to help support me, I’ll get back to top 100 on my own.

“My headspace is very different. I’m in a positive environment, good people around me, I’m in a healthy, happy relationship.

“Now all there is to do, is get back to where I belong.”

It’s hardly shocking Tennis Australia have been trying to distance themselves from the previous World No. 17 after he blasted Australian legend, Davis Cup captain and one of many key wildcard judges Lleyton Hewitt.

“No one likes him any more,” Tomic mentioned after a first-round Open exit in 2019.

“We have a lot of issues that not a lot of players are happy about. We all know who those players are. Myself, (Thanasi) Kokkinakis, (Nick) Kyrgios.”

Last season he mentioned he’d “win Wimbledon” earlier than the top of his profession regardless of having misplaced in straight units in qualifying to then-World No. 146 Roman Safiullin 6-1 6-4.

Tiley slams Aussie Open transfer calls

Meanwhile, Tiley has shot down solutions the Australian Open ought to be moved from its January date with the intention to keep away from the brutal warmth of the Aussie summer season.

In the wake of quite a lot of high-profile withdrawals from this yr’s match, calls emerged for the match to be moved within the curiosity of participant welfare.

“I did read that (report), I thought it was absolutely ridiculous, a bizarre claim,” Tiley mentioned.

“You talk to every player, this is the season. It starts in January. It starts here in Australia.

“It finishes with Davis Cup late on the men’s side and not as late on the women’s side but I do think it’s a long season. We’ve been talking about that for a long time.

“But Australia is the summer, Australia is January and this event is — from the players’ perspective — one of their favourite places to play.

“They’re coming here earlier, we’re now seeing players here for six weeks, for seven weeks and the preparation for the Australian summer is very normalised. They know what they need to do.”

The Australian Open kicks off on January 16 and runs till January 29 in Melbourne.