
Tennis fans sizzle as heatwave hits Wimbledon
It was provisionally the hottest start to Wimbledon on record. The BBC said temperatures at the All England Club had reached 31.4 degrees Celsius (88.5 Fahrenheit) by 1500 GMT. The previous record was set on June 25, 2001, when the mercury tipped 29.3C. Parts of the UK are currently in the grip of a second heatwave in a month, according to weather experts, with the sweltering temperatures expected to reach 34C in London and southeast England Monday. London start-up boss Sean Tipper said he had made sure to come prepared after failing to heed warnings before. 'Wimbledon when it's really hot is quite sweaty,' he told AFP on a family day out with his wife, mother and aunt.
The 31-year-old said they had brought hats and sunglasses plus 'a mini-fan and good hope'. 'Last time we were very hot so this time we've got rosé (wine) in a cooler so we can do a better job,' he joked. As temperature rose, tournament officials said they were 'strongly' advising people without tickets not to travel to the grounds and join the queue. 'In both the queue and the grounds there may be periods where shade is not available,' a statement said.
A security member ventilates spectators with a fan ahead of the men's singles first round tennis match between Spain's Carlos Alcaraz and Italy's Fabio Fognini.
Cooling scarves
The hottest June day ever recorded in the UK was 35.6C on June 28, 1976. But Wimbledon is more used to making headlines for the rain than the heat. Tournament chief executive Sally Bolton said they were 'absolutely ready for it and actually delighted that it's sunny and not wet like it was last year'. For Chilean tennis fan Maria Verdugo, 40, there were pros and cons to enjoying tennis in different weather conditions. 'On balance, though, I prefer the sun, it's more exciting,' she said, clutching a glass of Pimm's with plenty of ice.
Under a heat rule to protect players' health, officials will be taking heat stress monitor readings 30 minutes before the start of play and then at 2:00 pm (1300 GMT) and 5:00 pm. The rule allows a 10-minute break to be taken at certain points in a match when the heat stress index is at or above 30.1C. Protocols are also in place to look after ball-boys and ball-girls on court who have access to cooling scarves.
Some visitors admitted they were already beginning to wilt. 'It's horrible, unbearable,' said retiree Linden Barnett after an hour watching Italy's Fabio Fognini play Spain's Carlos Alcaraz on centre court. 'You can't sit in it, we have to keep coming out to cool down,' she said, adding that the players 'must be feeling it'. 'I need a long cold drink, preferably with gin in it, at least then I'd forget how uncomfortable I am,' added youth worker Mel Megson, shielding herself from the relentless sunshine under some shrubbery. 'Some rain would be good — you'd find me dancing in it,' she added. — AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Kuwait Times
3 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
After outcry, ‘world's fiercest' collision sport seeks new markets
DUBAI: Under bright lights and cameras in Dubai, two large men charge at each other down a narrow, plastic pitch, colliding head-on with a bone-jarring thud that sends one of them sprawling. It's the start of a night of thumps, grunts and head injuries at Runit, the rugby-inspired competition that has quickly drawn a social media following and alarm from health experts. The injury-count is high: three of the 12 players are withdrawn with suspected concussion, including a sickening hit that leaves ex-National Rugby League pro Kevin Proctor writhing on the ground. The final ends when Sam 'The Ice Man' Suamili is too dazed to continue, leaving Auckland's Vulangi Olosoni, 26, to celebrate the Aus$200,000 ($130,000) first prize with his overjoyed wife and sister. Organisers have big plans for the Runit Championship League, the brainchild of seven young men from Melbourne who have evolved it from a backyard game to a marketable commodity in a matter of months. Saturday's competition, attended by just a few hundred fans, was backed by several sponsors with a live-stream featuring ex-NRL pro George Burgess, a figurehead for the sport. Its rapid rise has been controversial, however. The event was held in the United Arab Emirates after calls to ban it following trials in New Zealand, where a teenager died playing a copycat version last month. Kevin Proctor receives medical attention after a tackle during the RUNIT Championship League. 'Honourable' According to Lou Sticca, a football agent and consultant promoter who brought the tournament to Dubai, the next stop is the United States. 'It's a contact sport. Americans love contact sport. This is tailor-made,' he told AFP. 'It's two gladiators. It's actually quite honourable. You've got two guys similar size, similar weight. There's a lot of technique,' he added. Runit, which bills itself as the 'world's fiercest new collision sport', is contested on a track 20 metres (65 feet) long and four metres wide. The athletes, typically with a rugby background and the build of a heavyweight boxer, have four runs at each other taking turns to hold a rugby ball. The winner is the man judged to 'dominate' the contest. Two doctors and three other medics were pitchside in Dubai, with two ambulances waiting outside, according to Sticca. The players, mostly New Zealanders, had medical checks including head scans before flying out and will be assessed again on their return, he said. 'We're engaging proper legal experts on concussion and as we grow the sport, we'll get experts in concussion at other sports,' Sticca said. 'We'll do whatever we can to play our part in ensuring the health and safety of our combatants.' 'Unacceptable threat' However, not everyone is convinced. New Zealand's Prime Minister Christopher Luxon called Runit a 'dumb thing to do', while the New Zealand Medical Journal said it was 'engineered for injury'. 'It is a ritualized, high-risk physical collision that poses an unacceptable threat to life and wellbeing,' an editorial said this week. 'As trauma clinicians, we warn unequivocally: Run It Straight is a mechanism for significant acute and long-term injury,' the journal added. Concerns over concussion have prompted new measures in several sports including the rugby codes as scores of retired players report serious health problems. Tania Mayne, a Dubai-based neurophysiotherapist who specializes in concussion, said the science was clear on impacts to the head. 'World Rugby has been so outspoken about how a contact should take place in a match,' she told AFP, referring to rugby union's governing body. 'This goes against everything out there.' Mayne added: 'I would just encourage people not to get involved and read what's out there. There's so much information about concussion in sport.' Chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a progressive disease caused by repeated blows to the head, is known to trigger violent moods, dementia and depression. Injuries from head knocks have also been linked to disorders such as motor neurone disease, early onset dementia, epilepsy and Parkinson's disease. However, Sticca said Runit was being unfairly singled out. 'Any contact sport has got the same issues. It's just that we're only hearing about this because it suits the agenda,' he said. 'We don't care about the critics, we care about the combatants. We care about making Runit a bigger, better sport. Simple as that.' — AFP

Kuwait Times
3 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
Saudi Arabia to host Italian Super Cup in December
RIYADH: AC Milan's Italian defender Davide Calabria lifts the trophy as he and his teammates celebrate winning the Italian Super Cup final football match against Inter Milan at the Al-Awwal Park in Riyadh on January 6, 2025. - AFP ROME: Next season's Italian Super Cup will be played for the fourth time in Saudi Arabia but in December instead of January, the president of the Italian League announced on Tuesday. "The dates for the Super Cup are December 18 and 19 for the semi-finals, and the 22 for the final," said Lega Serie A boss Ezio Simonelli after the governing body's general meeting. "We don't yet know where these matches will be played, either in Riyadh or Jeddah. The choice will be made by the Saudis. I would be more in favour of Jeddah, but we don't have the option to choose." Since 2023, the 'Supercoppa Italiana' has pitted four teams against each other — the reigning Serie A champions, the runners-up, and the winners and runners-up of the Italian Cup. The 2025 edition will include Serie A holders Napoli, second-placed Inter Milan, Italian Cup winners Bologna and losing finalists AC Milan. AC Milan won last season's Italian Super Cup for their first trophy since 2022, defeating their arch-rivals Inter 3-2. Simonelli also discussed the possibility of relocating an Italian league match between AC Milan and Como to Australia next February. "We have submitted an official request to the Italian Federation, UEFA, and FIFA," he said. "It's a long and complex process, but we haven't received any negative feedback so far. "We came up with this idea because San Siro will be closed for the 2026 Winter Olympic Games. "We have an obligation to find another stadium and we're trying to turn it into an opportunity by promoting our championship abroad," he added. — AFP

Kuwait Times
3 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
Portugal on red alert as temperature hits record 46.6C degrees
Temperature records broken in Spain and Portugal LISBON: Portugal recorded its highest-ever single-day temperature in June -- 46.6 degrees Celsius -- while last month was the hottest in Spain, the countries' weather services said Tuesday. The IPMA agency said the record temperature -- the equivalent of 115.9 degrees Fahrenheit -- was registered on Sunday at Mora, about 100 kilometers (60 miles) east of the capital, Lisbon. That beat the previous June high of 44.9C in the southwestern town of Alcacer do Sal in 2017. Some 37 percent of IPMA monitoring stations recorded temperatures higher than 40C on Sunday, it added. A number of regions, including around the capital, were put on red alert on Sunday and Monday because of the heatwave, that has spread across much of Europe. Eight Portuguese inland regions remained on the second-highest alert with the highest risk of forest fires, especially woodland areas in the centre and north of the country. In Spain, the Aemet weather service said the country had its hottest June on record, with an average temperature of 23.6C. The "extremely hot" June "pulverised records", surpassing the normal average for July and August as well as the previous June record of 22.8C set in 2017. Temperatures in southern Spain soared to 46C on Saturday -- another June high -- while scientists said the Mediterranean Sea was warmer than usual at 26.01C on Sunday, another June record. Human-induced climate change is being blamed for stoking hotter and more intense heatwaves, particularly in cities, where tightly packed buildings amplifies temperatures. Michael Byrne, a reader in climate science at the University of St Andrews in Scotland, said heat domes -- when warm air is trapped in the atmosphere -- were nothing new. "What is new are the temperatures heat domes deliver. Europe is more than two degrees Celsius warmer than in pre-industrial times, so when a heat dome occurs it drives a hotter heatwave," he added. "Climate change is loading the dice such that when a heat dome does occur, it brings hotter and more dangerous temperatures," he added. - AFP