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Dubai ATP Fallout Players Stuck After Iran Strikes Ground Flights Across the Gulf

A group of ATP players and staff were left stranded in Dubai this week after regional airspace closures and flight cancellations followed Iran’s missile and drone strikes tied to the escalating U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran. The disruption hit just as the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships ended, turning what is normally a quick transition from the Gulf to the U.S. desert swing into a logistical mess.

The ATP confirmed on Monday, March 2, that a small number of players and team members remained in Dubai and were being housed in official tournament hotels while the tour stayed in direct contact with those affected.

Among the players caught up in the delays was Daniil Medvedev, who lifted the Dubai title on Saturday, March 1, after Tallon Griekspoor withdrew before the final with a left hamstring injury. Medvedev posted publicly from Dubai as the travel situation deteriorated.

Andrey Rublev, ranked inside the world’s top 20 and a semifinalist in Dubai, was also among those unable to depart as scheduled. The timing matters: the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells runs March 1–15, with the main draw beginning Wednesday, March 4.

The first concrete casualty on the calendar was the Eisenhower Cup, the one-night mixed doubles exhibition held Tuesday, March 3, at Indian Wells. Medvedev and Rublev were pulled from the event because they could not get to California in time; replacements were announced. Singles participation later in the week remained possible depending on travel openings.

Inside Dubai, the immediate problem was not accommodation but uncertainty. Players, coaches, and tournament personnel were effectively put on standby while routes through parts of the Gulf became unreliable or unavailable. One of the clearer first-person accounts came from Finnish doubles specialist Harri Heliövaara, who wrote that much of the surrounding airspace had closed and that the practical guidance was to stay put and wait. He described the difficulty of trying to move by road to neighboring countries as a workaround when conditions were shifting quickly.

The impact has not been confined to Dubai’s airport. In Fujairah, also in the United Arab Emirates, play at an ATP Challenger event was interrupted amid reports of a nearby drone strike and explosions, prompting an on-court scramble and an emergency halt to matches.

Those lower-tier disruptions matter because Challenger and ITF events are the week-to-week backbone for players trying to climb the rankings, and they often operate with thinner margins and fewer contingency options than the main tour. The broader point is the same across levels: when airspace shuts down across a region that normally functions as a major transit hub, the tennis calendar stops behaving like a calendar.

For the ATP’s top players, the next domino is Indian Wells seeding and preparation. Even if flights resume in limited form, late arrivals compress recovery time, shrink practice windows, and can force withdrawals from media and promotional obligations. The ATP has framed its role as support and coordination, keeping affected groups in tournament hotels and monitoring conditions.

For now, the situation remains fluid: partial flight resumptions and alternative routing can change the picture hour by hour. But the episode has already underlined something the tour generally prefers to forget until it can’t: global tennis is built on constant movement, and a geopolitical shock can strand elite athletes as easily as any other traveler.

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