
The PTPA Professional Teams Association (PTPA) has applied for a court order to prevent the ATP journey from “communicating, forced or threatening communication with players.
The association says ATP has tried to put pressure on players to sign pre-a-party statements, saying they had no preliminary information about the legal action that began this week by the PTPA.
The 24-time winner Novak Djokovic, the union, referred to “practice against competition and openly neglect of players’ welfare” in his complaints on Tuesday.
Djokovic is not one of the players named Shakir in official court documents, but on Thursday openly announced in Miami Open that there were elements of the request he agreed with, and some were not with him.
“I have seen some changes, but there are some fundamental changes that have not yet been made yet and I really hope that all the PTPA governance institutions will meet together to resolve these issues,” he said.
PTPA, “In the name of all of the players”, take measures against the men’s ATP trip, the women’s tour of women, the International Federation and the International Corruption Agency in the United States, Britain and the European Union.
Australian Nick Kergeus is the highest player named as a plaintiff alongside PTPA.
On Friday, PTPA lawyers have asked Judge Margaret Garnt to issue an order that prevents all four suspects from communicating with players about their participation in the process.
The proposal accuses ATP of threatening to reduce awards and pensions to end the legal funds that meet in the fight against the case. He says this will form a “explosion intervention” in the judiciary.