Madrid openly

Mirra Andreeva just came on stage and served in the Madrid Open quarterfinals when the electricity went out.
A total disruption left millions in parts of Spain, Portugal and France without electricity, causing chaos in many areas.
In the Spanish Tennis Championships, the electronic telephone system dropped, the players and referee chairs gathered the line, and the scoreboard turned black.
In the main court, Britain's Jacob Fearnley is about to keep the game against Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov, a “spider cam” hovering in the eyeliner of the players, preventing them from serving.
Andreeva of Russia won, but later admitted that it was not easy, saying, “My serve time was 15-40 and I was like, oh Mira, please, be sure to do everything I can and just go to this game and finish this game.”
In Spain, traffic lights go out, trains stop running, Brazilian doubles player Fernando Romboli posted on Instagram, he is trapped in the elevator,,,,, External It lasts for 30 minutes during the game.
Fearnley and Dimitrov had to leave the court at 6-4 5-4, while Andreeva, Coco Gauff and Italian Matteo Arnaldi managed to complete their respective wins.
“So far, the hardest thing after the game is over can't be taken to the shower,” Goff, U.S. said on Monday.
“There is no running water, so I just have to pick up the baby wipes, wipe myself, spray some perfume and call it a day.
“It's crazy, how much we rely on electricity. It's crazy.”