
Tennis: Wimbledon underway in sweltering conditions
30 June 2025 15:16
LONDON (REUTERS)Wimbledon sprang into life on Monday as the world's oldest tennis tournament opened its gates to thousands of spectators who had queued up for hours in the gentle morning sunshine.Latecomers faced more challenging conditions amid the Europe heatwave as the action began at the All England Club in what meteorologists predict could be the hottest start to the Championships in history.The mercury is expected to rise, eclipsing the previous record temperature for the start of the grasscourt Grand Slam in 2001 when players, organisers, and ticket-holders were tested by the 29.3 degrees Celsius reading.Conditions could be more reminiscent of the Australian Open furnace if the heat surpasses Wimbledon's tournament record of 35.7 degrees in 2015."Obviously, it's a very warm day," All England Club chief executive Sally Bolton told reporters."The first point to make is that the athletes compete in temperatures like this all year on the tour. So for us Brits at the Championships, it feels very hot."We do have the heat rule available to us, which again is well used on the tour. So we will be taking heat stress monitor readings half-an-hour before play, at 2 pm and 5 pm today."Under Wimbledon's heat rule, players are allowed a 10-minute break when the Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) is at or above 30.1 degrees Celsius.One player who usually enjoys the sunshine is defending men's champion Carlos Alcaraz, and the Spaniard begins his bid for a third straight Wimbledon title against Italian veteran Fabio Fognini on Centre Court.World number one Aryna Sabalenka plays Canadian Carson Branstine on Court One, where big crowds are expected with local Jacob Fearnley playing Brazilian Joao Fonseca before the All-British clash between Emma Raducanu and Mingge Xu.
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The National
3 hours ago
- The National
Christopher Eubanks hopes to ace tennis as a player and broadcaster
Two years ago, Christopher Eubanks had a life-changing grass-court season. In March 2023, the American had cracked the top 100 for the first time, on the back of an impressive run to the Miami Open quarter-finals, as a qualifier. Two-and-a-half months later, on the grass courts of Mallorca, 77th-ranked Eubanks clinched a maiden ATP title, two days ahead of the start of Wimbledon. Entering the Championships, Eubanks owned a 2-8 win-loss record at the Grand Slams, with his best results being two second-round appearances. That all changed that summer though, as Eubanks stormed to the Wimbledon quarter-finals, knocking out 13th-ranked Cameron Norrie and fifth-ranked Stefanos Tsitsipas along the way. His nine-match winning streak on grass courts was eventually snapped by world No 3 Daniil Medvedev, who beat Eubanks in five sets in the last eight. Eubanks, who was 27 at the time, hit a career-high mark of 29 as a result of that run. But its impact on him went far beyond rankings. 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Sabalenka powers past Branstine in Wimbledon opener as Jabeur retires
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