<
>

Sam Querrey defends decision to breach COVID-19 protocols in Russia to protect family

Sam Querrey said he was told he was no longer welcome at the hotel and doctors would determine if they had to quarantine in a hospital instead. Photo by ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT/AFP via Getty Images

American Sam Querrey, who was sanctioned by the ATP for breaching COVID-19 protocols at the St Petersburg Open in October, has defended his actions and said he did what he felt was right as a father and a husband.

Querrey left Russia in a private jet with his wife and baby son after all three tested positive for the virus before the start of the tournament, sneaking out of their hotel early in the morning without informing reception.

The ATP, the men's governing body, handed the 33-year-old a suspended $20,000 fine which will be lifted if Querrey does not commit further breaches of health and safety protocols related to COVID-19 within a probationary six-month period.

"Again, we were very happy at the hotel," Querrey told Sports Illustrated in an interview. "We were distancing ourselves. We weren't around anyone, we were staying in the room, and never had a complaint, or a problem.

"So I said, 'Please try to have the doctors come the next morning at 10 a.m., not Sunday night at 10 p.m.' The tour finally agreed to that, and because we were still going to get help from the tour, the embassy.

"But I kinda had to make a decision between 10 p.m. and 10 a.m. the next day. I had my wife there, and I had my baby there, and as a human decision, I was like, 'Hey, I don't feel comfortable with this.' So we made the decision to charter a plane and leave."

Querrey said he was ready to quarantine in the tournament hotel for two weeks after testing positive but after two days he was told he was no longer welcome at the hotel and doctors would determine if they had to quarantine in a hospital instead.

The American said lack of clarity made it necessary for him, his wife, and their seven-month-old son to fly to London and quarantine at an Airbnb.

"I felt as a father and a husband there's a human element to this, and I had to do what I feel like is right," he said, adding that the flight cost him about $40,000 plus and he had to also pay for the stay in London for two weeks.

"I wasn't willing to let our family go to a hospital for a minimum of two weeks where we were at."

Querrey said he was "frustrated" with the media coverage of the incident and added: "It made it seem like I just got COVID and bounced. I didn't feel how it was portrayed after that was fair."