Heat and humidity quickly became a major issue when the Olympic tennis tournament opened yesterday.
French Open finalist Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova grasped for an air tube during a medical timeout and grew frustrated at the lack of ice in a court-side container.
Mona Barthel struggled with 10 double-faults in a loss to Iga Swiatek as a searing sun made it nearly impossible to see the ball once she tossed it.
The temperature soared to 33°C and the heat index made it feel like 38°C.
“You’re just not feeling great,” Pavlyuchenkova said. “So I wasn’t enjoying it at all.”
Still, Pavlyuchenkova routed Sara Errani of Italy 6-0, 6-1.
Midway through the second set, though, doubts started to creep into Pavlyuchenkova’s head as she shoved bags of ice up her skirt on a changeover.
Then she had trouble fiddling with a tube blowing cold air next to her seat.
“It’s not easy to find the right position, because it’s just on the bench and somebody has to hold it so the air is blowing on you,” the Russian said. “I don’t think it was well prepared.”
Second-seeded Daniil Medvedev, who also competes for the Russian Olympic Committee at the Tokyo Games, called it “some of the worst” heat he has played in after eliminating Alexander Bublik of Kazakhstan 6-4, 7-6 (10/8).
“I’m not going to lie, but you have to play,” Medvedev said. “That’s the Olympics, you go for the medal. You are not here to cry about the heat.”
Medvedev suggested that organizers move all matches to the evening to avoid the heat of the day.
“I don’t think they are going to change anything in the middle of the tournament, but that’s what can be done,” he said. “I think the fact that we have only one minute between the changeovers is a joke... It should be 1:30 like it is in other tournaments.”
Ice melted in court-side containers.
“Every time I had to take the ice pack or ice towel, it wasn’t cold at all,” Pavlyuchenkova said. “They expected the heat and it wasn’t 100 percent ready for us.”
She needed more than an hour after her match to recover before talking with reporters.
“I feel a bit better, but I just have a massive headache now,” she said. “I think they somehow could have tried to make it a bit easier.”
On one occasion, Barthel lost sight of the ball completely on her serve.
“I was blinded by the sun,” the German player said. “I couldn’t see it anymore.”
There are rules for extreme heat that call for a 10-minute break between the second and third sets if players request it.
Play can also be suspended if an internal advisory group deems conditions dangerous — in which case play would continue on center court under a retractable roof.
While Swiatek also acknowledged how “hard” it was dealing with the heat, she seemed more pleased to extend a family legacy at the Olympics.
She grew up listening to stories from her father about competing at the 1988 Olympics in rowing, then won a bronze medal herself in doubles at the Summer Youth Olympics.
Swiatek beat the 172nd-ranked Barthel 6-2, 6-2 in the opening match on Center Court.
“It’s just special playing for Poland and representing your country,” said Swiatek, who became the first Polish player to win a Grand Slam title at last year’s French Open.
Aiming for his fourth Olympic medal, Andy Murray and British partner Joe Salisbury beat the second-seeded French team of Pierre-Hughes Herbert and Nicolas Mahut 6-3, 6-2 in doubles.
Murray is the two-time defending Olympic champion in singles and he also won a silver in mixed doubles at the 2012 London Games with Laura Robson.
Also in doubles, top-ranked singles player Ash Barty and Storm Sanders of Australia eliminated Nao Hibino and Makoto Ninomiya of host Japan 6-1, 6-2.
Naomi Osaka is to play Zheng Saisai of China today after she climbed a replica Mount Fuji on Friday to light the cauldron in the ceremony’s crowning moment.
Taiwan’s Chan Hao-ching and Latisha Chan were eliminated in the women’s doubles, losing 5-7, 6-1, 10-6 against Monica Niculescu and Raluca Olaru of Romania in 1 hour, 58 minutes.
Additional reporting by staff writer and AFP
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