Windsor Star

Athlete collapses as Australian Open choked by smoke

Players question choice to play in dire conditions

- DEVIKA DESAI

Organizers of the Australian Open, which runs in Melbourne from Jan. 20 until Feb. 2, have been slammed publicly after several tennis players — including Canadian Genie Bouchard — struggled to complete their qualifying matches due to the severe heat and stifling air quality, with one player collapsing mid-game from breathing difficulti­es.

Slovenia player Dalila Jakupovic was leading in her match against Switzerlan­d’s Stefanie Vogele on Monday at Melbourne Park, but was forced to quit after falling to the ground in a coughing fit. Australian Bernard Tomic and Bouchard had to call medical timeouts due to issues from smoke inhalation.

“I’m never one to want to stop playing, but I definitely started feeling unwell and I had to call the trainer because it was tough to breathe and I felt a bit nauseous,” said Bouchard.

Bouchard’s opponent Xiaodi You was also affected by the poor air quality and succumbed to cramps in the third set. She could barely move and was forced to serve underarms at times.

Bouchard continued the match post-treatment and defeated Xiaodi, moving on to the second round of qualifiers, days before the tournament is set to begin. However, other players did not fare as well.

Australia’s one-time child prodigy Tomic was eliminated in the first round of the qualifiers on Tuesday, saying he couldn’t breathe because of bushfire smoke.

Tomic first questioned the chair umpire about the regulation­s concerning match conditions in the first set and then took a medical timeout in the second.

“No air’s going in, I’m getting tired so easy,” Tomic told the trainer and doctor during the timeout. “I just can’t breathe.”

Meanwhile, Jakupovic told ABC News that it was unfair of the officials to ask players to compete under the conditions. “It’s not healthy for us,” she said. “I was surprised, I thought we would not be playing today but we don’t have much choice.”

“I don’t have asthma and never had breathing problems. I actually like heat.”

An exhibition match between top tennis player Maria Sharapova and Germany’s Laura Siegemund was also called off early due to the excessive heat. Sharapova told ABC News that she felt a “little cough coming out” to the end of the game but assumed it was due to an earlier illness.

However, she later heard her competitor telling the umpire that she was struggling too. “I thought thankfully I’m not the only one,” she said. “I think it was the right call by officials.”

Qualifiers were delayed for an hour on Tuesday due to concerns that the smoke could affect players’ health.

Players woke to a peasoup haze blanketing Melbourne, prompting Ukraine’s world No. 5 Elina Svitolina to post a graphic of Melbourne’s “very unhealthy” air measured by the World Air Quality Index, a global monitor, on Twitter.

Australian Open tournament director and Tennis Australia chief executive Craig Tiley said that air-quality testing experts as well as those in the medical, environmen­tal, scientific and meteorolog­ical fields would continue to be consulted about the conditions for the tournament.

“When it is too hot or when raining, play will be suspended should the above measures deem that necessary,” he said. He explained that the Women’s Tennis Associatio­n and Associatio­n of Tennis Profession­als supported the decisions to carry out the matches Tuesday morning.

“This is a new experience for us all, how we manage air quality and therefore we have got to rely on those experts that advise us how best to continue,” he added.

The bushfires in Australia have reportedly destroyed an area the size of South Korea, killing 28 people and a billion animals. In the New South Wales alone, more than 3,000 homes have been destroyed.

Smoke from the fires has travelled to other parts of the world, affecting air quality and “visibly darkening mountainto­p snow” in New Zealand, and creating colourful sunsets in South America, according to Nasa.

The smoke has reached the lower stratosphe­re, about 17.7 kilometres above sea level, thanks to pathways from fire-induced thundersto­rms, created by the dry weather in Australia. Scientists expect the smoke to be able to complete “one full circuit” around the Earth before returning to the country’s skies from the west.

 ?? DARRIAN TRAYNOR / GETTY IMAGES ?? Canada’s Eugenie Bouchard takes a moment to catch her breath at a qualifying match in Melbourne on Tuesday.
DARRIAN TRAYNOR / GETTY IMAGES Canada’s Eugenie Bouchard takes a moment to catch her breath at a qualifying match in Melbourne on Tuesday.

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