Coughing Fit Sees Player Quit Australian Open Qualifying

Coughing Fit Sees Player Quit Australian Open Qualifying
Smoky skies due to wild bushfires are seen in Melbourne Victoria, Australia, on Jan 14, 2020. Courtesy of Astrokerrie /Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

A player collapsed in a coughing fit and retired from Australian Open qualifying on Jan.14 as organizers faced a storm of criticism for plowing ahead with matches despite bushfire smoke plunging Melbourne’s air quality to “hazardous” levels.

Slovenia’s Dalila Jakupovic was leading Stefanie Vogele 6-4 5-6 at Melbourne Park when she slumped to her knees at the back of the blue hardcourt suffering from breathing difficulty.

Twenty-eight people have been killed and thousands made homeless in recent months as huge fires across the country have scorched 11.2 million hectares (27.7 million acres), nearly half the area of the United Kingdom.

Jakupovic, 28, told reporters she was fighting for breath.

“I never experienced something like this and I was really scared,” she said.

“I was scared that I would collapse. That’s why I went on the floor (of the court) because I couldn’t walk anymore. When I was on the ground it was easier to get some air.”

Tournament director Craig Tiley defended the decision to proceed with qualifiers after they were initially delayed due to the poor air.

“During the period of when we suspended practice and restarted the matches there was an improvement in the conditions,” Tiley told reporters before Jakupovic’s retirement.

The pollution prompted warnings from Victoria state’s environment watchdog for people to stay indoors, bring pets inside, and shut windows.

A horse-racing meeting in the western suburbs was canceled and outdoor construction workers downed tools for the day, but governing body Tennis Australia said early on Tuesday that “conditions onsite (were) improving” at Melbourne Park.

Bushfire smoke has affected a number of elite sporting competitions involving soccer, rugby league, and cricket, and the pollution has raised safety fears at tennis’s first Grand Slam of the year.

An Australian Army combat engineer utilizes a JD-450 Bulldozer to spread out burnt woodchip at the Eden Woodchip Mill in southern New South Wales, Australia, on Jan.11, 2020. (Bill Solomou/Reuters)
An Australian Army combat engineer utilizes a JD-450 Bulldozer to spread out burnt woodchip at the Eden Woodchip Mill in southern New South Wales, Australia, on Jan.11, 2020. Bill Solomou/Reuters

Pea Soup Haze

Players woke to a pea soup haze blanketing Melbourne, prompting Ukraine’s world number five Elina Svitolina to post a graphic on Twitter of Melbourne’s “Very Unhealthy” air measured by the World Air Quality Index.

“Why do we need to wait for something bad to happen to do an action,” she tweeted.

Men’s former world number six Gilles Simon posted a biting tweet about Australian Open (AO) organizers.

“When we find doctors who say that playing at 45 degrees is not dangerous at the AO and referees who say that the wet grass is not slippery at Wimbledon, we must be able to find an expert who certifies that the air quality is sufficient right?”

A burning gum tree is felled to stop it from falling on a car in Corbago, New South Wales, Australia, on Jan.5, 2020. (Tracey Nearmy/Reuters)
A burning gum tree is felled to stop it from falling on a car in Corbago, New South Wales, Australia, on Jan.5, 2020. Tracey Nearmy/Reuters

Victoria’s Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton told local media the air quality in Melbourne had been the “worst in the world” overnight.

Former world number one Maria Sharapova’s warmup match at the Kooyong Classic in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs was abandoned with the Russian trailing Germany’s Laura Siegemund 7-6 5-5 after both players complained to the chair umpire.

Five-times Grand Slam champion Sharapova said she felt a cough coming on in the second set.

“After two and a half hours that was the right call for me. I think both of us felt it,” she told reporters.

Authorities expect the smoke to linger until Wednesday when afternoon showers are forecast.

Australian Open men’s champion Novak Djokovic expressed concern earlier this month that bushfire smoke might cause health problems for players.

Tournament organizers said last week that play would be confined to Melbourne Park’s three roofed stadiums and eight indoor courts in the “unlikely case of extreme smoke conditions”.

by Ian Ransom