A poisonous snake came out during a tennis match in Australia

Tennis in Australia continued in Brisbane on Saturday when a tennis player walked out on the court with a poison during the match. According to the news agency Reuters, the match between former US champion Dominic Thiem and his Australian James McCabe, Thiem failed in the first set. Before the game begins, you say second is set, causing the match to be stopped immediately. According to local media, it was a 20-inch venomous eastern brown snake, which the security called a professional person to catch, who picked up the snake and put it in a bag. The snake stopped play for 40 minutes and when it resumed, Thiem won the remaining two sets and are now just one win away from the main draw at the Brisbane International. Speaking to reporters after the match, Dominic Thiem said, "I love animals, but they say it was a poisonous snake and he was too close to the ball boy, so it was a very dangerous situation." "This has never happened to me before and I may never forget it," he said. According to the Australian Museum’s website, the Eastern Brown is a venomous snake whose bite can cause paralysis and bleeding that is impossible to stop. Australia is home to 20 of the world’s 25 most dangerous snakes, but due to safety measures, snakebite deaths in the country are negligible. Former world number three injury Dominic Thiem is currently ranked 98th in the world due to injury problems and is currently eyeing the first Grand Slam of the year, the Australian Open, which starts on January 14.
