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Tennis at Madrid Open cancelled due to large-scale power failure

The Madrid Open was called off on Monday due to a widespread outage in the Spanish capital. This forced the 15th seed, Grigor Dimitrov, and his British opponent Jacob Fearnley from the court. Scoreboards and overhead cameras were also without power.

A spidercam that was left too close to court in the round of 32 match between Dimitrov and Fearnley, where Dimitrov won 6-4 5-4, had to be removed.

The Madrid Open announced on X that "the nationwide power outage experienced in Spain on Sunday 28 April forced the cancellation both of the day and the night sessions."

The microphone on Coco Gauff's post-match interview was cut short at the Arantxa-Sanchez Stadium after it lost power. She had defeated Belinda Bencic by a score of 6-4, 6-2, to reach the quarterfinals.

The ATP reported that electronic line-calling systems were also affected, and spectators posted pictures of the dark hallways in the Manzanares Park Tennis Center.

The ATP announced on its website that "two singles matches and a doubles match were in progress at the ATP Masters 1000 tournament when power was cut at 12:34 p.m., local time."

Aryna Sablalenka and Iga Swaatek were due to play in the round of 16 in the women's singles later that day, but their match was postponed.

Marta Kostyuk, a former Australian Open quarterfinalist, wrote in an Instagram post that her match against Anastasia Potapova had also been postponed.

Matteo Arnaldi's round of 32 match with Damir Dzumhur was temporarily suspended because there was a power outage on Court Four. The match, however, was completed and Arnaldi won 6-3 6-4.

Local media reported that the power outage affected also traffic lights, oil refineries and some airports as well as part of the Madrid Underground. Red Electrica, the Spanish grid operator, said that it was working closely with energy companies to restore electricity. (Reporting by Chiranjit Ojha in Bengaluru Editing by Christian Radnedge)

(source: Reuters)