Wimbledon set for scorching start as heatwave looms
A photograph taken on 24 June 2025 shows planter separating TV crews on the roof of the broadcast centre in the grounds of the All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club in Wimbledon, south west London.
Photo:
GLYN KIRK
Wimbledon is braced for its hottest ever start with London set to endure a searing heatwave that is forecast to peak as play begins at the All England Club on Monday.
With the mercury expected to rise into the mid-30s Celsius on Monday after a hot weekend, players, organisers, ticket holders and those queuing face a challenging day.
The previous record temperature for the start of the grass court Grand Slam event was set in 2001 when 29.3C was reached.
Monday's expected blast of heat could even surpass the tournament record of 35.7 degrees in 2015 when on-court temperatures were significantly higher than that.
Wimbledon's heat rule will likely come into force, allowing a 10-minute break in play when the Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) is at or above 30.1 degrees Celsius.
The WBGT, which will be taken before the start of play and then at 1400 and 1700, takes various factors into account including ambient temperature, humidity, wind and sun angle.
The rule will apply after the second set for all best of three set matches, and after the third for all best of five set matches with players allowed to leave the court during the break, but not to receive coaching or medical treatment.
While welcoming the heat rule, Chris Tyler, an environmental physiology researcher at the University of Roehampton, said the heat could affect the quality of matches.
"It's good that they have a rule that uses the Wet Bulb Globe Temperature but what it doesn't factor in is what the players are doing," he told Reuters.
"Most of the heat risk for players relates to their actual body temperature increasing, 80 percent of their body temperature is related to what they're doing.
"Many players will change the way they play if it's that warm, shorter points and perhaps less interesting for the fans.
"Top players with the resources for warm weather training are used to heat and are conditioned and will probably be okay, but the real problem is for players who are not used to it and cannot adapt their play."
He also said iced towels applied to the back of the neck during changeovers are not necessarily the best way for players to cool down.
"It's like a football team giving a pain-killing injection to their star player before a cup final, it makes them feel better but the injury is still there," he said.
"If it's core body temperature you want to bring down, the towels aren't really going to do much.
"The feet and the forearms have a lot of blood vessels and (cooling them down) is quite a good method of heat exchange, also the groin where you have the femoral artery."
While elite players are likely to cope with the expected heat, Wimbledon organisers are taking precautions to protect the general public and staff, including ball boys and girls (BBGs).
"Adverse weather is a key consideration in our planning for The Championships, and we are prepared for the predicted hot weather, with comprehensive plans in place for guests, players, staff and the BBGs," a club statement said.
More free water refill stations will be provided around the grounds and real-time weather alerts will be announced on big screens and via the tournament website.
Staff shifts will also be adjusted to mitigate the heat while 'shade-mapping' will help people get away from the sun.
After extreme heat on Monday and Tuesday, temperatures are expected to drop to the low to mid 20s for the rest of the week with some rain showers likely.
-
Reuters
Hashtags

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

RNZ News
11 hours ago
- RNZ News
Tennis: World number one Jannik Sinner plays down split with trainer and physio ahead of Wimbledon
Italy's Jannik Sinner, after he lost the men's singles final match against Spain's Carlos Alcaraz at the 2025 French Open in Paris on June 8, 2025. Photo: AFP / Thibaud Moritz Parting company with two of your team days before Wimbledon might not sound ideal, but world number one Jannik Sinner has played down any negative impact as he prepares for the grass-court Grand Slam. The 23-year-old Italian surprisingly split with Marco Panichi and Ulises Badio, his trainer and physiotherapist respectively, after the Halle tournament and was asked about the situation in his pre-tournament media conference. "Nothing major happened. Nothing big happened. I parted ways not long ago but it's not affecting me. I feel ready to compete. I feel free. I feel me and my team, we are ready to do the best we can," Sinner, who is bidding to win his first Wimbledon title, told reporters. "We've reached incredible results in the past with them, so obviously huge thanks to them. We made some great job, but I decided to do something different." Panichi and Badio had been part of Sinner's team since September 2024 and helped him to win this year's Australian Open to take his career Grand Slam haul to three. He also reached the French Open final this month but lost a thriller to Carlos Alcaraz. "Look, in this sport things can happen. Sometimes a player feels something different, and that's my case." Sinner suffered a crushing disappointment at Roland Garros where he lost to Alcaraz having led by two sets. He won one match at Halle before losing to Alexander Bublik, but said he was mentally prepared for Wimbledon where he hopes to become the first Italian singles champion. "Honestly, I feel ready to play. I feel ready. We are practising very well. What happened in the past is in the past already," said Sinner, who faces fellow Italian Luca Nardi in the first round. "I feel good. Especially mentally I feel in a very good spot. Halle was a little bit different. Now it's gone and I see also the reactions of other players and people, they talked the level (of the French Open final) was very high. "I feel like that I'm playing great, great tennis on grass. Hopefully I can show this also in the match court." Sinner served a three-month suspension earlier this year after agreeing a settlement with the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) in February after authorities accepted that the anabolic agent clostebol had entered his system inadvertently via massages from his former physio Giacomo Naldi at Indian Wells in March 2024. During his time away he explored some new talents, recording a single with Italian opera great Andrea Bocelli in which he speaks his lines. While he will not be giving up the day job, Sinner said it had been great to do something completely different. "I felt like especially in these three months where I couldn't play, it was the right timing to do also the video together and everything," he said. "Obviously he's an incredible artist. Just being part of this for me was amazing. It was a big, big work, a work in progress. I think we are all very happy how it came out." - Reuters

RNZ News
11 hours ago
- RNZ News
Tennis: Upbeat Novak Djokovic still hunts milestones with 20th Wimbledon looming
Novak Djokovic after winning the 2022 Wimbledon title, the last time he won the Grand Slam title. Photo: PHOTOSPORT Novak Djokovic says he is still hunting more career milestones as he prepares for his 20th Wimbledon, bidding to match Roger Federer's record of eight men's singles titles. The emerging duopoly of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner has shifted the focus away from the 38-year-old Serb who will be seeded sixth this year, his lowest since 2018. Despite that, no one will be dismissing the threat he poses as he chases an unprecedented 25th Grand Slam title. Asked whether it felt like he was now more hunter than hunted, after being knocked off his perch by the young guns, Djokovic said his goals remained the same. "In a sense you're always hunting because you're always going for the titles, and in my privileged position, the records and more history," he told reporters after practising at a sunny and warm Wimbledon on Saturday. "I do feel that I'm always in that position of going for something with the attitude of trying to win rather than trying to defend." Djokovic has reached the final of the last six Wimbledons, losing the last two to Spaniard Alcaraz. He has not added to his Grand Slam collection since the 2023 US Open, since when Alcaraz and Italian Sinner have shared them, winning three apiece. He admits he was outplayed by world number one Sinner in the French Open semi-finals but had taken encouragement from that run in Paris. A return to Wimbledon perhaps offers him the best chance of breaking their stranglehold and becoming the oldest Grand Slam champion in the professional era. "I would probably agree that Wimbledon could be the best chance because of the results I had, because of how I feel, how I play in Wimbledon, just getting that extra push mentally and motivation to perform at the highest level," he said. "Let's see. I like the way I feel right now physically. Tennis-wise I've been playing good on the practice sessions. Obviously completely different when you start a tournament. "But yeah, I'll try to have a very good tournament and go as far as I can." Djokovic opens his latest Wimbledon quest against Frenchman Alexandre Muller on Tuesday needing just three victories to become only the second man to reach 100 match wins at the grass court Grand Slam. Federer won 105. - Reuters

RNZ News
a day ago
- RNZ News
English Premier League club announces new manager
Former Irish international, Keith Andrews, announced as new manager for English Premier League club, Brentford. Photo: BEN WHITLEY English Premier League club Brentford has named former Ireland international Keith Andrews as its new manager. Andrews replaces Thomas Frank, continuing the West London side's trend of promoting from within. Frank, who left to take over at Tottenham Hotspur, stepped up from the assistant role at Brentford to take charge in 2018, and now Andrews has been handed his first managerial role having served as the club's set-piece coach for one season. According to media reports, Andrews has signed a three-year contract. "Keith is a very good fit," director of football Phil Giles said. "He gets on with everyone, he's very open and he's a learner. He understands the players in the building and the way we've played and trained under Thomas Frank. "Keith will bring his own evolution but isn't starting from scratch, so hopefully we can make some quick progress." Andrews, who made 35 appearances for Ireland, began his coaching career as assistant manager at MK Dons where he finished playing in 2015 before joining the Ireland Under-21 set-up as assistant coach to Stephen Kenny. Kenny became manager of Ireland's senior side in 2020, taking Andrews with him, where they both remained until Kenny's contract ended three years later, but Andrews found himself newly employed in a matter of weeks. Andrews joined Sheffield United's coaching staff when Chris Wilder took over in December 2023, with the Irishman leaving at the end of the season to take up his role at Brentford. "He is someone we have known for a while and always had in mind for a role at some point in the future," Giles said at the time of the appointment. While Frank took assistant first-team coach Justin Cochrane, head of athletic performance Chris Haslam and first-team analyst Joe Newton with him to Spurs, Andrews remained at Brentford, a clue perhaps to his future at the club. Frank, who took Brentford into the top flight for the first time in 74 years and made them a competitive force in the Premier League, will be a hard act to follow for the inexperienced Andrews, but his predecessor also went into the job relatively unknown. "I'm very appreciative of the owner, the board and the staff that have supported this decision," Andrews said. "It's an opportunity I feel I'm very capable of doing and ready to do. I'm humbled to be the new head coach of an amazing football club that's touched me in a lot of ways." - Reuters