MELBOURNE
(AFP) – Players fainted and vomited and a ball boy collapsed as the Australian
Open boiled in one of the hottest days in its history Tuesday, prompting angry
complaints and keeping fans away in droves.
Temperatures of 42.2 Celsius (108 Fahrenheit), enough to melt plastic bottles on the rubberised courts, made for a punishing day for the players with some incensed their matches went ahead.
Temperatures of 42.2 Celsius (108 Fahrenheit), enough to melt plastic bottles on the rubberised courts, made for a punishing day for the players with some incensed their matches went ahead.
Canada’s
Frank Dancevic lashed out at the “inhumane” playing conditions after he felt
dizzy and then blacked out and needed treatment during his first-round defeat
to Benoit Paire.
“I
think it’s inhumane, I don’t think it’s fair to anybody, to the players, to the
fans, to the sport, when you see players pulling out of matches, passing out,”
he said.
“I’ve
played five-set matches all my life and being out there for a set-and-a-half
and passing out with heat-stroke, it’s not normal.
“Having
players with so many problems and complaining to the tournament that it’s too
hot to play, until somebody dies, they’re just keep going on with it and
putting matches on in this heat.
“I
personally don’t think it’s fair and I know a lot of players don’t think it’s
fair.”
Chinese
player Peng Shuai cramped and vomited during her loss to Japan’s Kurumi Nara,
and also received a violation for time-wasting at a moment when she said she
was unable to walk.
“I
was just cramping and I couldn’t stand up. Both legs, my hamstrings were
cramping,” she said.
“I
had no energy, I couldn’t run, I couldn’t serve,” she said, blaming the heat
for her defeat. “So it’s impossible to play tennis like this.”
Officials
said because humidity remained low, they chose not to invoke emergency rules
which allow them to halt play and close the roofs on the centre and second
court.
“Of
course there were a few players who experienced heat-related illness or
discomfort, but none required significant medical intervention after they had
completed their match,” said chief medical officer Tim Wood.
The
Australian Open, held at the height of the Melbourne summer, is notorious for
its heat. State officials imposed a blanket fire ban and warned of extreme
temperatures in some areas on Tuesday.
The
day’s peak of 42.2 Celsius was shy of Melbourne’s January record of 45.6
Celsius, which came during the notorious Black Friday bushfires of 1936.
Temperatures
above 40 Celsius are expected for most of the week, in similar conditions to
the 2009 Black Saturday bushfire disaster which killed 173 and injured hundreds
more.
To
cope, players draped themselves in ice towels and guzzled water on the
changeovers as temperatures, already at 35 Celsius before play even started,
rose steadily until the early evening.
“It
felt pretty hot, like you’re dancing in a frying pan or something like that,”
said defending women’s champion Victoria Azarenka. “I don’t think anybody wants
to go outdoors right now.”
Daniel
Gimeno-Traver helped a ball boy to his chair after he collapsed during the
Spaniard’s four-set loss to Milos Raonic. A spokeswoman said the boy later
recovered.
And
former women’s world number one Caroline Wozniacki said that when she put her
water bottle down on court, the bottom started melting.
“Geez,
it feels hot out there,” said Wozniacki, who headed straight for an ice bath
after her win over Lourdes Dominguez Lino. “It feels like I was sweating in a
sauna or something.”
Empty
seats were prevalent as many fans stayed away, perhaps knowing how bad
conditions have been in the past.
In
2009, the hottest edition on record with an average daily temperature of 34.7
Celsius, reigning champion Novak Djokovic pulled out of his quarter-final with
Andy Roddick, citing heat exhaustion.
And
in 2007, women’s star Maria Sharapova slammed the conditions after playing a
gruelling three-setter against France’s Camille Pin.
Officials
have sought to play down any health risks, pointing out that no player has ever
died from dehydration on a tennis court
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