
Wimbledon nightmare as fans run out of water in middle of heatwave and hottest tournament in 147-year history
Official sponsor evian ran out of dispensers as the mercury hit 31C in SW19.
4
4
An insider said 50 per cent of supplies had been used on the opening day of the tournament - the hottest in its 147-year history.
The embarrassing blunder saw the company forced to stop selling its new eco-friendly £5 bottles - which thirsty fans could top up all day - and close its stands.
Spectators were still able to access free tap water from more than 100 refill points and buy evian's red-top bottles in shops.
evian blamed the balmy conditions for a spike in demand for its mineral water.
A spokesperson said: 'The exceptionally hot weather, combined with how popular the evian refill system has been with both players and spectators, has resulted in demand being far higher than we have seen in previous years...
"As a result, we've had to stop offering evian refill earlier than planned.'
It came as Wimbledon chiefs faced mounting pressure to break tradition and close the Centre Court roof for the finals this weekend.
The much-anticipated semi-final clash between reigning champion Carlos Alcaraz and Taylor Fritz had to be paused twice when two spectators fell ill.
4
The scorching temperatures in SW19 got too much for one woman who was carried out by staff just 40 minutes into the match.
Minutes later a pensioner became unwell in the stands and was treated by paramedics.
She collapsed again by the stairs as medics tried to stretcher her out.
Dozens of seats were left empty during the second set of the blockbuster showdown, as those sitting in direct sunlight sought shade off the court.
At least eight spectators have fallen ill so far this year - prompting calls for Championship bosses to utilise the £70 million retractable roof in hot weather.
Polish finalist Iga Swiatek, 24, questioned why it cannot be closed after someone in the crowd passed out during her semi-final win over Belinda Bencic on Thursday evening.
She said: 'From what I saw and heard on different tournaments, they're usually not willing to close the roof when it's not raining, when it's not a necessity. I'm not sure why.'
The world No4. said she would not object to the roof being shut 'if it would help' protect fans.
The clash was paused for nine minutes while the spectator was stretchered out.
It was the third medical incident of the day - after a tussle between Aryna Sabalenka and Amanda Anisimova was paused twice for the same reason.
4
Belarusian ace Sabalenka, 27, declared 'London is not ready for this weather' after she stepped in to hand-deliver an ice pack and water to fans struggling in the heat
She added: 'It was super hot. I can't even imagine sitting in one place and the sun just constantly hitting you.'
US star Anisimova, 23, who caused upset by turfing out the world No1, said the heat made the clash 'tough', adding: 'I felt like I was getting tired throughout some points of the match.'
Wimbledon's two show courts have air conditioning systems which maintain optimal conditions when the retractable roofs are closed.
The tech regulates temperature and humidity to ensure the grass court remains suitable for play.
But the roof - which takes around 10 minutes to shut - has never been closed due to hot weather since it was completed in 2009.
Tennis fans are now urging the Club to reconsider the rules.
Former nursing advisor Helen Rushton, 68, who travelled to the tournament from Aberdeenshire with her partner Ewart Dawson, stressed: 'If you've got the technology there, you might as well use it.'
IT worker Kevin Dawson, 57, from Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, said the roof should be 'dual purpose'.
He added: 'With the extreme temperatures, you can be sitting there for several hours with the sun pumping down on you.'
His wife Sue, 59, said it would also stop the treatment of fans 'delaying matches'
The All England Club said it has significantly increased the number of messages on screens across the grounds to remind guests to seek shade, drink water and take time out of the sun - but stressed they would only close the roof due to rain or darkness as Wimbledon is an outdoor tournament.
Hashtags

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


BBC News
8 minutes ago
- BBC News
Storm Floris: Yellow wind warning for Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland faces possible disruption on Monday as Storm Floris moves in from the Met Office has issued a yellow warning for strong winds from 06:00 BST Monday until 06:00 gusts of up to 50mph (80km/h) are expected across much of Northern winds of about 70mph (115km/h) are expected towards the north coast and more exposed areas. A degree of uncertainty remains around the exact track of the storm, with further updates expected over the storm is also expected to bring a spell of heavy and persistent rain, mainly through the first half of Monday before Floris is the first storm to hit Ireland and the UK since Storm Éowyn in storm sparked a rare red warning for Northern Ireland, and the first red warning for the whole island of Ireland. Ahead of the storm, Newry, Mourne and Down council has decided to close the district's forests, country parks, and community trails on Monday. Among the green spaces affected include Castlewellan, Delamont, Kilbroney, Slieve Gullion and Warrenpoint Municipal associated facilities, including cafes, caravan parks, and mountain bike trails, will also be council is also advising the public not to visit play parks, outdoor sports facilities, beaches, harbours, nature reserves and coastal sites on Forest Park will close on Sunday and campers will be asked to leave by 18:00 BST to allow staff to lock the park securely. The closure includes the campsite in the main park and Drumbuck Valley Mountain Park will also be closed on Monday due to the expected adverse conditions, Northern Ireland Water has City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council has warned there will be disruption to council services and facilities on Monday due to the storm including parks, open spaces, golf courses, caravan parks and household recycling Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs has also advised the public not to visit affected forests and parks on Monday and Tuesday until the high winds subside. The Republic of Ireland is also set to feel the force of Floris on Monday, which is a bank holiday in the northern areas are expected to get the strongest winds, gusts of up to 50mph (80km/h) are expected quite Éireann forecaster Andrew Doran-Sherlock said: "As this is a Public Holiday Weekend with a large number of outdoor events and with many people going camping, etc, and with an increased usage of temporary structures such as tents, more people will be at a greater risk of exposure than would normally be the case."He added: "Our advice would be to pay attention to the weather forecasts and warnings issued over the weekend and take them into consideration with any plans you have. "And as always, please heed the advice of local authorities."


BBC News
8 minutes ago
- BBC News
Table tennis player to represent England for first time at age 70
A table tennis player will fulfil has lifelong ambition to represent his country - more than 50 years after he first picked up a just turned 70 years old, John Poysden has broken into England's top 10 ranked over-70s began his sporting journey at a club in Rochford and was Southend-on-Sea's number-one ranked men's Poysden said he was "absolutely thrilled" to receive the call-up to the Home Nations Tournament in September. His sporting passion took a back seat as he became a city trader, and had a family, but he retired at 54."I then quite quickly discovered that quite a few things had changed in my 25-year absence, and there was an awful lot to learn," he said."I've never really done things half-heartedly, so I guess I just worked on adapting and improving once again."I thought perhaps I'm in with a chance of selection but to be honest it was more in hope than expectation, so when I received the call-up I was absolutely delighted and felt honoured to be asked." The Home Nations Tournament sees teams compete from England, Wales, Scotland, Ireland, Isle of Man, Guernsey and are the reigning champions of Mr Poysden's age bracket, and he will have the chance to retain that title between 5 and 7 September at Nottingham Trent University."I've never been the most naturally talented player. I've got great friends who don't pick up a bat for several months and they just pick up a bat and they've just got hand-eye coordination immediately," he explained."I have to work at my game. I have to practice." Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


Telegraph
38 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Big Ron Atkinson interview: ‘I saw on Facebook that I'd died!'
A couple of months ago, Ron Atkinson was scrolling through his phone when he happened upon a rather unexpected Facebook posting. It informed him that the renowned former footballer, manager and television pundit Ron Atkinson had died. He was processing this news, when his phone rang. 'It was Dean Saunders,' he recalls of the player he managed at Aston Villa. 'He says to me: 'I see you're dead, boss, but as you used to say to us all the time: 'I'm sure you can run it off'.' And he leans back in his chair and roars with laughter. Indeed, while he might be 86 years old, news of Ron Atkinson's death is more than a little premature. The man forever known as Big Ron is very much still with us, relishing life, finding comedic value in everything, from the origins of his phrase 'lollipop' to describe a step-over, through Joe Royle's behaviour in the sauna, to the Tenerife holiday property he sold for well over the asking price soon after the invasion of Ukraine to a man who sounded suspiciously Russian. 'The estate agent assured us he was from Lithuania,' he smiles. 'I suspect he'd been to Vilnius about as often as I have.' Atkinson is in his home in the Birmingham stockbroker belt. Though these days it is not so much financiers who live thereabouts as footballers. 'It's getting like Cheshire round here,' he says, pointing out of his kitchen window. 'Jack Grealish has a place over there his dad lives in, Ollie Watkins is down the road, Jude Bellingham's built a couple of houses for his family just there.' In the midst of it all, Atkinson's sizeable property is exactly as you might imagine Big Ron's place to be: plush, luxurious, with marble floors and a carpet in the lounge the pile of which is so thick it endangers the ankles just to walk across it. Parked in front of the property are a couple of Mercedes, at the back is his wife Maggie's pride and joy; a magnificent garden, filled with blooms, rolling out into the Worcestershire countryside. As to what his contribution is to the floral abundance, he is succinct. 'Me? I just sit in it.' Atkinson has invited Telegraph Sport to his home to talk about the 40th anniversary of the start of the 1985-86 season when the Manchester United side he managed began at a gallop, winning their first 10 matches. By November 1, still unbeaten, they had accrued 41 points, just a point fewer than United managed in the whole of last season. 'And hey, I tell you what, they were lucky to stay up,' he says of Ruben Amorim's side. 'I once went down with 43 points when I was at [Sheffield] Wednesday.' His United began that season as they had completed the previous one, when they beat an Everton side going for a treble in the FA Cup final with a display of precision and power, driven by Bryan Robson and Norman Whiteside in midfield, with Mark Hughes, Gordon Strachan and Jesper Olsen providing the finishing flourishes. 'There was no telly,' he recalls of the broadcasting dispute which kept the game off the nation's screens for four months as the season began. 'Which was funny because this rumour went round that we were winning every game in style, playing everyone off the park. No we weren't. Yeah, we had a couple of belters, like doing Villa 4-0. But we had more than enough scrappy 1-0s, where we won through battling not skill. Truth was, we were lucky to win 10.' Such fortune was soon used up. It was a start they could not sustain. After losing for the first time at Hillsborough in November, his United fell into a slump that ultimately resulted in a fourth-place finish, well behind the champions Liverpool. At the time much was made of a succession of injuries, particularly to Robson, who missed most of the latter half of the season. 'I'm not going to blame injuries, everyone gets injuries, it's part of football,' he says. 'But we lost Robbo, we lost Olsen, we even had Arthur Albiston out for a bit and he was never injured. The irony is Robbo got injured playing for England. Like Stevie Coppell a couple of years earlier. Never been injured playing for United, gets a career-finishing one playing for England.' While injuries were a factor, though, there was also talk of internal indiscipline. 'People say there was a drinking culture at my United,' he says. 'I tell you what, they couldn't have lived in a drinking competition with Liverpool or Everton. 'You know where they used to drink? In Paddy Crerand's pub. He kept me informed precisely what they were up to. The problem was [Paul] McGrath and Whiteside, when they were injured, the club used them in the hospitality suites. Course everyone was filling their glass. Word spread.' Whatever the cause of the slump, Atkinson's disappointment was profound. He thought, in that autumn flourish, he could become the first United manager to lead them to the title since Matt Busby 20 years previously. Though that, he says, was never the insistence from his employers. 'When I came in, I said to Martin Edwards [the then United chairman] that we had to get the club back into Europe, and we did that every season,' he recalls. 'We had some great nights in Europe. That game against Barcelona [in the European Cup Winners' Cup in March 1984, when his team overturned a 2-0 deficit in the first leg by winning 3-0], that was the greatest noise I've ever heard at a football match. It was this incredible crescendo.' An incredible night at Old Trafford as Man Utd overcome a 2-0 first leg deficit to knock Barcelona out of the European Cup Winners Cup in 84 — When Football Was Better (@FootballInT80s) October 11, 2017 Besides, he says, getting into Europe back then was an achievement in itself. 'In my career, I got in the top four eight times, and never once played in the European Cup. Quite right. It was for the champions. 'I mean, these days you can almost be in the bottom three and qualify for the Champions League, as Spurs proved last season. There are so many clubs in Europe, I see some of the names and I think they've been made up from tiles on the Scrabble board.' For his United, though, there was no Europe that season. English clubs were banned after the Heysel tragedy. All attention was on the league, and Atkinson's failure to win it from a position of such strength ultimately undermined him. 'I organised for Terry Butcher and Kerry Dixon to come in that summer,' he recalls, of trying to rebuild things after the disappointment. 'Everything was sorted, it was a simple matter of getting things signed off by the board. When that didn't happen, I knew it was over for me.' Indeed it was: a year after he had led the league, he was dismissed, to be replaced by a then plain Alex Ferguson. Though he holds no complaints. 'People ask me who was the worst chairman I ever worked under, and there were a few. But I tell you who was the best: Martin Edwards. He was so knowledgeable. And straight. When it was over, it was clean.' He went on to more than a decade of managerial success, winning the League Cup with both Wednesday and Aston Villa, taking Villa to second place [behind Ferguson's United] in the inaugural Premier League. So what was the secret of his success? 'Team building. You want good lads in a team,' he says. 'You don't mind scallywags, but you don't want villains. Scallywags might take the p---, villains are looking to rob you. My philosophy was to make it fun, make them want to come in for training, have the craic, a little razz or two, keep things buoyant.' By his own admission he was not a tactical maestro. Rather, he relied on his man-management skills, fostering a rumbunctious culture around any club he ran. The highlight of his week was five-a-side on a Friday, when he would be at the heart of the action, chivvying, shouting, endlessly mickey–taking. 'I used to love it if a player was carrying a slight knock on a Friday. I'd tell him, you rest ready for Saturday, sit out training. It meant I could join in the five-a-side.' Despite the fun, under Big Ron it was no easy ride. 'I never saw the bad in a player. If he missed a chance I'd always say, at least you were there. When I was a young pro at Oxford, the manager said to me: enthusiasm is free, so use it. I lived by that, always looking at the positive. But I was on them. And yeah, I could be sharp.' How sharp? 'Gordon Strachan said to me the other day: 'You'd last no more than three weeks in management these days if you tried to talk to players like you used to do to us.' Now they'd be saying to me: 'Talk to my agent'. But actually, I'm not sure Strach's right. I think the majority of players today, they'd be happy for a bit of hard talking. They're no different from the players I managed or how I was as a player. They don't want molly-coddling.' So, would he go back? 'People say to me, I bet you'd like to be managing today with all the money they get. Well, we did all right. And I had a great life. Eh, what I always say is this: it was better than working for a living. I did work in a factory, the BSA parts division in Birmingham. The highlight of the day was when one of the girls from the office walked past and we'd all bash the tools against the bench. When that's the best it gets, I tell you what, football is like heaven.' When he left management for the final time, after an inauspicious spell at Nottingham Forest, it was his way with words that forged his next career. He was a brilliant television co-commentator, employing a unique vocabulary that became known as Ron-glish, full of 'early doors' and 'lollipops' and 'giving it eyebrows' at the near post. Where did it all come from? 'Well, when I was a player, the one move I had was a bit of a step-over. The manager at Oxford at the time saw me try it one day and said: 'What are you doing? You look like a steamroller doing a lollipop.' Who knows what he meant. But I liked the phrase and used it ever since.' Language, though, ultimately cost him dear. His wholly uncharacteristic racist rant about Marcel Desailly 20 years ago may have been off air but it was ugly and it brought him down. He was cancelled from mainstream broadcasting, dropped from a column at the Guardian, and lost lucrative commercial contracts. He apologised profusely, did a couple of mea culpa television documentaries, went in the Big Brother house by way of mitigation. But being cowed and down wasn't Ron. He wanted to get back to doing what he had always done: having a laugh. These days he's not lingering over it. This is not a man for regrets. 'Actually I do have one, you know, slight regret,' he says. 'I should never have let Garry Birtles go at United. I know he's had that bad start, not scoring for a year and all that. But that wasn't under me. He did all right for me. I wanted him to stay, but Cloughie [Brian Clough] was in his ear to get him back to Forest. I should have done more to keep him.' These days, after hanging up the microphone on a spell with United's in-house channel MUTV during the pandemic, his involvement in football is now largely on the after-dinner speaking circuit. 'I did an event the other day and there were 11 of us lined up on stage,' he says. 'Roberto Carlos couldn't have bent a free-kick round that wall. It took so long between turns to speak, I could have had a couple of hours' kip.' When he is not on the circuit, he watches football on the television. Though he wonders whether there might be too much these days. 'You ask me which pundits I like, well I used to like Souey [Graeme Souness], but he's gone now. Not sure who out of the current lot I'd make an appointment to listen to. The trouble is, there's so much football on the telly now, nothing stands out.' Still, he watches enough to have opinions, not least of his old club United. 'What would I do if I were in charge there? Well, they could have resolved a lot of stuff by signing a decent striker. They paper over so many cracks. I'd have got Harry Kane. I know they say [Spurs chairman Daniel] Levy wanted £100m for him. OK, so pay £120m. With him up front, the midfield would have known who to pass to, the defence would have played better. Goalscorers make everything better.' As for who he enjoys watching these days, he is unequivocal. 'I love Bruno Fernandes. He's some player. People don't half moan about him, say he doesn't tackle and that. But he's not there to tackle. And I tell you what, if he'd been in that City side, he'd have been as effective as [Kevin] De Bruyne. Yeah, people say he moans at his team-mates. But I don't blame him – some of those he has to play with.' He shakes his head in silent disdain. This is what he can't understand: players who aren't up for the scrap, who don't acknowledge their privilege and fight for it. His own competitive instincts have always been ridiculously strong. When he's not watching the game these days, he likes to freshen them on the golf course. 'Am I still competitive? I was playing golf yesterday with some lads, fell out of the cart and did my elbow, blood everywhere. They're all going: 'Come on Ron, better stop, get to the hospital'. I'm going: 'You only want me to stop so you can win. Let's play on here, shall we?'' It was the love of competition, he says, that always drove him. 'When I was on the touchline I wanted to kill the other manager. But after the game, it was back in my office, mates together and we'd have such a laugh.' He tells a story about how after one match, he was in an intense debate with Joe Royle, who was Everton manager at the time. Ron decided he needed to continue his standard post-match routine, stripped off and headed into the sauna. 'Joe followed me in, sat down alongside me and carried on talking. Only he was still dressed in his suit,' he roars with laughter. It is but one of dozens of anecdotes about his friends and rivals in the game. The sad thing is so many of them – Terry Venables, Jack Charlton, his brother Bobby – have gone, many with dementia. So does he fear that threat himself? 'Did I tell you the story of Joe Royle and the sauna?' he says, by way of an answer, before winking and cackling once more. 'Well, you know, what can you do? It happens or it doesn't. You just have to live life. And I'm loving it.'