Stars sweat it out in Sydney ‘sauna’

Stars sweat it out in Sydney ‘sauna’

SYDNEY - Agence France-Presse
Stars sweat it out in Sydney ‘sauna’

Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark removes an iced towel from her neck during a ten minutes break due to high temperatures during her women’s singles match against Svetlana Kusnetsova of Russia at the Sydney International tennis tournament January 8, 2013. REUTERS photo/Daniel Munoz

World number four Agnieszka Radwanska said it was “too hot to play tennis” and China’s Li Na said it was like a sauna as the Sydney International was hit by a searing heatwave yesterday.

Poland’s Radwanska, who reached last year’s Wimbledon final, battled fearsome temperatures topping 40 degrees Celsius at the Olympic Park complex to brush past Japanese veteran Kimiko Date-Krumm 6-4, 6-3.

While Radwanska reached the last eight, the major talking point was not the standard of play but the blistering heat ahead of next week’s first Grand Slam event of the year at the Australian Open in Melbourne.

“I think this is too hot to play tennis,” said Radwanska. “Even for players, for ball kids, for the people sitting out there, I think it’s just too hot.

“I think I would prefer to go on court at 11:00 pm and play a match.”

The temperature climbed to a high of 41.4 Celsius in the early afternoon at the tournament, with cooler temperatures forecast for today.

All the day’s scheduled matches were completed despite the searing heat.

Radwanska said she was trying not to alter her game in the conditions but admitted she had more of a battle with the heat than her opponent.

“I think the first main thing is just to stay calm and trying to survive,” she said.

Li Na, who beat Japanese qualifier Ayumi Morita 6-1, 6-0, said she was reaching for the ice towels at each changeover.

“I was feeling like playing in a sauna. At the first changeover I didn’t use an ice towel. I was feeling the heat was coming and I was like, ‘What’s going on’?” Li said.

“At the next changeover I was like, ‘OK, I need an ice towel every changeover, otherwise I don’t know how to play on the court’.

“It’s too hot, but I’m still in the tournament, so it’s good news.” The tournament has an extreme heat policy but it only comes into effect at the discretion of the tournament referee.

Tennis officials apply a complex formula factoring in heat, humidity and wind to determine when on-court conditions become too stressful for the players.