Daniil Medvedev cools down during his match against Andrey Rublev.

Daniil Medvedev cools down during his match against Andrey Rublev.Credit:Getty Images

“Maybe I’m going to finish my career and nothing is going to happen,and then it’s fine,then I’m talking for nothing. But we don’t want something to happen and then say,‘Oh,my God,Medvedev said this a couple of years ago’.

“But I don’t have the solution because even if we say,‘Let’s play all the matches at night’,maybe on different stadiums,we saw Sinner-Zverev,and they were not much better than us today,with Andrey,just because even at night New York can be really hot and humid.

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“I don’t have real solutions,but it’s still better to speak a little bit about it before something happens.”

Unlike the Australian Open,the US Open does not have a dedicated heat policy – but the New York slam has experimented with partially closing the roofs on their stadiums to provide more shade during day matches for fans and players.

Australian Open officials introduced a new and improved policy from 2019,includingthe AO heat stress scale,which was developed in conjunction with medical experts and University of Sydney research.

There are specific recommendations at each step of the scale,more comprehensive measuring of weather conditions at Melbourne Park,and also the option for a 10-minute break in men’s singles matches,on top of similar in-game suspensions for women,junior and wheelchair players.

A Tennis Australia spokesperson told this masthead the policy was reviewed every year,and .they were in constant communication with players about hydrating,recovery and other ways to handle extreme conditions,especially during particularly hot summers.

An AP analysis shows that it is feeling increasingly hotter at grand slam tournaments in recent decades,reflecting the climate change seen in heat waves across the globe this summer. Week two at the US Open is pushing players to the limit.

They’re using ice – so much ice,in plastic bags or wrapped in towels – and courtside tubes blowing cold air to try to stay cool.

Medvedev used an inhaler during a second-set changeover Wednesday while being checked on by a doctor,who checked his breathing with a stethoscope. Rublev leaned back on his sideline chair as if he would rather be anywhere else.

“At the end of the first set,I couldn’t see the ball anymore,” Medvedev said,adding that he looked across the net at No.8 seed Rublev – his countryman,good pal and godfather to his daughter – and thought:“Wow. It seems like he cannot run anymore.”

Medvedev wore a white towel around his neck during the on-court interview after finishing off the two-hour,48-minute match at Arthur Ashe Stadium and said he was looking forward to a cold shower. Under a new rule adopted on Tuesday for the rest of the event,the US Tennis Association partially closed the retractable Ashe roof – normally used to block out rain – to provide some additional protection from the sun for spectators and competitors.

“The immediate impact is specifically that more fans were shaded,” tournament referee Jake Garner said on Tuesday,“and at the same time,the decision to close the roof puts the court in full shade,which does improve the conditions on court.”

Rublev feels the heat.

Rublev feels the heat.Credit:AP

One unintended result:The shadows can make it hard to see the tennis balls as they zip through the air.

Zheng Qinwen,the No.23 seed who defeated 2022 runner-up Ons Jabeur in her previous match,said that dynamic bothered her during a 6-1,6-4 loss to Aryna Sabalenka.

Sabalenka won 20 of the initial 24 points to race to a 5-0 lead after just 17 minutes.

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She reached the semi-finals for the fifth major in a row and will rise from No.2 to No.1 in the WTA rankings next week,replacing 2022 US Open champion Iga Swiatek,who exited in the fourth round.

As for the weather? Sabalenka,a 25-year-old from Belarus,said her training base in the United States prepared her well for the heat and humidity,which rose above 50 per cent.

“I mean,it was hot,but because I did my preparation in Florida – I mean,what can be worse than Florida,in July and June,you know? Not,like,overall,” said Sabalenka,who has dropped a total of only 21 games through five matches over the past one and a half weeks. “So I think that’s really[helping] me today to stay strong and[not] really get tired because of the heat.”

She improved to 7-0 in major quarter-finals as she seeks her second slam trophy to go alongside the oneshe won at the Australian Open in January.

Sabalenka will meet reigning Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova,of the Czech Republic,or 2017 US Open finalist Madison Keys in the semi-finals. The other women’s semi-final will be No.6 Coco Gauff against No.10 Karolina Muchova.

AP

Watch all the action from theUS Open on 9NOW and 9GemHD,with every match streaming live&ad-free and centre court matches in 4K UHD on the home of grand slam tennis,Stan Sport.

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