Australian Open: Extreme temperatures causes suspension of play at Melbourne Park
Play was suspended for three hours at the Australian Open on Tuesday afternoon because of extreme heat.

With the temperature into the mid-30s, the tournament's heat stress scale, which also takes into account humidity and wind speed, hit five just after 2pm, meaning play was stopped on the outside courts.
Among those affected was British number two Dan Evans, who had just taken a two-sets-to-one lead over Argentina's Facundo Bagnis in the first round.
Play continued under the roofs on the Rod Laver, Margaret Court and John Cain arenas.
The decision came just before the start of Andy Murray's clash with Matteo Berrettini on Laver, enabling it to start indoors.
It took until 5pm for conditions to improve sufficiently for play to resume on the outdoor courts.
Tuesday was forecast to be the hottest day of the tournament, with the possibility of thunderstorms and cooler temperatures from Wednesday.
Editor's Picks
- 01
India legend Virat Kohli indicates desire to retire from Test cricket ahead of England tour
- 02
Man City manager Pep Guardiola: Toughest season of my career
- 03
Como boss Cesc Fabregas dreams of signing Barcelona's Eric Garcia
- 04
Chelsea's Enzo Maresca hails 'fantastic' Newcastle midfielder Sandro Tonali
- 05
Jannik Sinner given hero's welcome at Italian Open despite off-court controversies