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German player Alexander Zverev faces a trial during this year's French Open over domestic abuse allegations.
The hearing starts on 31 May and Zverev does not have to appear in person, German court officials told BBC Sport.
In November, Zverev was given a penalty order and fined after being accused of physically abusing his ex-girlfriend.
Zverev denies the charges and has lodged an objection against the order, meaning he remains legally innocent and is not convicted until a final ruling.
Speaking at an ATP tournament in Paris in November, Olympic champion Zverev told reporters he intended to contest the penalty.
The world number six added: "I'm not going to comment on [the case] to be honest because there is a procedure still to come."

On Monday, the Tiergarten district court in Berlin said it had set the date for what is expected to be an eight-day public trial in front of a single judge.
The French Open, where Zverev has reached the semi-finals in each of the past three years, starts on 26 May and runs until 9 June.
"The defendant will, in principle, not have to appear in person because it is a hearing after he contested the penalty order," a court spokesperson told BBC Sport.
After the start of the case on 31 May, the court will sit on 7, 11, 18 and 21 June, followed by 5, 12 and 19 July.
Wimbledon - the third Grand Slam of the season - takes places between 1 and 14 July, followed by the Paris Olympics from 26 July.
More dates can be added if the judge says time will be needed to examine the evidence and, for example, call more witnesses.
The spokesperson said Zverev has not been ordered to attend the hearing, but added the court could "theoretically" ask him to appear later in the trial.
The news came on the eve of Zverev starting his Australian Open campaign against fellow German Dominik Koepfer in Melbourne on Tuesday.
A penalty order in Germany is issued when a judge, after examining the written evidence, believes a ruling can be made without going to trial.
The defendant has the right to contest the penalty order, which will likely lead to a public trial.
In a statement released when the penalty order was issued in November, Zverev's lawyers said the evidence had been dismissed as "incomprehensible and contradictory" by a forensic medical report from a Berlin doctor.
Legal firm Schertz Bergmann also claimed the process leading to the penalty order had included "serious procedural violations".
Zverev will defend the case with "all the means at his disposal", Schertz Bergmann added.
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