logo
The ultimate test: watching this glorious sporting summer has given me a headache

The ultimate test: watching this glorious sporting summer has given me a headache

The Guardian2 days ago
There is a crick in my neck, a rick in my back, and a permanent ache behind my eyes. A friend refuses to offer sympathy. 'You did this to yourself,' she says as I pop paracetamol. Thousands of hours of medical research are ploughed into elite sport, but where are the studies into the physical and mental demands of keeping up with it?
While winter may be fiercely programmed, it's the multi-disciplinary bunfight of summer that is the ultimate test of a sports fan. Right when our diaries demand we're at our most sociable, our most available, our most outdoors, the calendar loses all sense of perspective and dumps events on us like it's trying to save them from a burning building. We stand below, arms hopelessly full, desperately trying not to drop anything.
The past fortnight has offered a pair of excellent, if contrasting, case studies. The first was the weekend of the Euros final; also the Lions' crucial second Test against Australia and England's critical fourth Test against India; also, my Norfolk friends' silver wedding anniversary. They couldn't have known, when they married 25 years ago, that their celebrations would clash with multiple major sporting events, but they wouldn't have cared either: Nigel and Claire loathe sports, and don't own a TV.
A better person might have respected their life choices; a true friend would have left their phone behind on the scheduled Saturday morning beach walk. My screen glowed like a tell-tale heart in my jacket pocket, one hand clutched around its silent stream of rugby union content. If humans were more advanced life forms, the information could have beamed up my arm direct to my optical cortex; instead, I had to keep stopping to roll up my trousers, take off my shoes, 'marvel' at the view, and any other excuse to sneak a look at the screen.
When the Lions were back within two points, I made my own 99 call: a tactical ice-cream purchase that allowed me to backmark the group and risk turning up the volume. It was low tide on the north Norfolk coast, and the 5G had given out by the time I was halfway to the water's edge. The picture was frozen on a heavily pixelated scrum at the time I heard the winning try. The return of phone signal near the dunes brought the news that India were 0-2 in the cricket.
Extreme circumstances are supposed to reveal your character. In my case, all it takes is a weekend in Norfolk with limited data coverage and a wifi-less bedroom. I think of myself as both a lover of the countryside and an excellent party guest. And yet when push came to shove, I wasted an entire afternoon ignoring the giant puffball mushrooms, hovering red kites and scuffling hedgerow pheasants around me, instead thumbing fruitlessly at an Old Trafford scorecard that refused to update.
The Euros final was the trickiest moment to negotiate: the anniversary couple had booked us in at a fancy wine bar, where the live jazz went on until 6pm. I managed to position myself at the end of the table next to a football-loving friend, and we only got busted when someone moved the ice bucket in front of us and her phone fell over, screen-side up, to reveal Lauren James being subbed off. 'Is the game going well?' someone asked. 'No,' we replied in unison.
By extra time we were back at the house, where we sorry-notsorryed our way into the living room with a laptop. The only three of us interested in this historic, nerve-shredding title defence tessellated our hips on to a two-person sofa and watched soundless images, while the rest of the guests sat opposite making determined conversation over our yelps, groans and explosive swears. It was, as someone noted, a room of two halves.
If you think the above is ridiculous behaviour, firstly, you're not wrong. Secondly, it only got worse last weekend. After the hijinks of Norfolk, an entire two days on the sofa with the rugby, cricket and Formula One all available on Sky Sports presented itself like a spa break. Instead, the endless flicking back and forth – between Bundee Aki's drops in Sydney, Lewis Hamilton's qualifying woes in Hungary, and England's rollercoaster ride at the Oval – brought on a tension headache so powerful and insistent I had to spend half of Sunday in bed, being soothed by the background burble of Test Match Special.
In truth, I've been overdoing it since Wimbledon. It is both the blessing and the curse of the modern sporting fan to be able to have what we've always wanted: all the coverage, all the time. If the thing you love is available to you, who but an ingrate would cut themselves off?
The ironical coda to all this was the knife-edge finish to the England's Test series on Monday morning, right when most of us were back to work. Foolishly, I had arranged an unalterable hour-long meeting in the centre of London at 11am, so I recorded the game's climax to watch on delay, and determined to get myself home without discovering the score.
It took every ounce of concentration to fight my own muscle memory and resist the repeated urge to reach for my phone. Shuffling my way through the underground, I stared at my shoes like a teenager, terrified to look up in case I crossed paths with any fans on their way back from the ground. I was only a stop away when the train briefly surfaced and I heard the ping of a text.
I've never understood, before, why Orpheus checked on Eurydice. Suddenly there I was, acting on instinct, fatally turning my head. '2-2 the only fair result!' my eyes took in, as the train plunged back into a tunnel. Oh well. Maybe it was time for an intervention. These last two weeks have not been good for me.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'No quick fix' as Martin faces familiar Rangers problems
'No quick fix' as Martin faces familiar Rangers problems

BBC News

time23 minutes ago

  • BBC News

'No quick fix' as Martin faces familiar Rangers problems

New ownership, a new head coach, nearly a full team of new players, but the man charged with improving fortunes on the pitch has been left insisting there is "no quick fix" after familiar failings reappeared to blight Rangers at the start of the new Martin's rebuilt side remain unbeaten in five games under the former Southampton two of those have been draws in their opening matches in the Scottish Premiership - something the former Rangers defender knows is not good enough for a side expecting to challenge reigning champions Celtic for the for their 3-0 win over Viktoria Plzen in Champions League qualifying on Tuesday, the same Rangers players were booed off after escaping defeat thanks to a late penalty against a Dundee side many expected to be lambs to the is a familiar story from previous regimes that Martin says will "just take some time" to change, so where does that leave Rangers and their new team boss? 'I should've made some changes' Having finished 17 points adrift of their city rivals last season, Rangers are already a one behind Celtic before Brendan Rodgers' side play their game in hand in Aberdeen on Rangers get through their Euro tie after Tuesday's second leg against Plzen, they will postpone the league match against St Mirren on 24 August to prepare for the play-off tie, which means they could be seven behind by the time Celtic visit Ibrox the following could have been even worse off. It can be argued they were fortunate to escape Motherwell with a point last weekend, while Rangers had to play the final half hour against Dundee with 10 men before captain James Tavernier came off the bench to rescue another with his late spot kick.A "disappointed" Martin admitted: "There was just general lethargy and no speed in the first half."After last week's draw at Fir Park, Martin had questioned the mentality of some of his players, complaining that some "have to drop their ego", and was delighted with the reaction against time, he was "pleased with the response of the team when we went down to 10 men and we could've won the game in the end, but the mentality has to come from the very first kick of the match". Martin accepted some of the blame, admitting: "In hindsight, I should've made some changes to inject that energy in the team, but I explained my decision before the game and maybe I could've changed that now the game is finished."We're learning about the group all the time, so that's a lesson learnt today."BBC pundit and former Rangers striker described them as "Jekyll and Hyde" but pointed out that the same happened under the previous two team bosses - Philippe Clement and Barry Ferguson - last season."They would have a brilliant European performance and then fall flat," he told BBC Scotland's Sportscene. "It is something Russell Martin needs to get rid of quickly." 'Maybe not so quickly as everyone wants' Saturday's draw was particularly galling to Rangers fans considering Dundee arrived with a poor start to their season heaping pressure on their new head coach, former Rangers defender Steven who managed just two attempts on goal in their opening Premiership defeat at home to Hibernian, had not beaten Rangers in their previous 17 meetings and had lost their latest 19 visits to passing style being adopted under Martin meant centre-half John Souttar attempted 131 passes in this game, the highest of any player in the opening two weekends, the team overall attempted 709, again the highest of any team, and their 20 goal attempts were highest they still relied on a penalty to rescue a draw and have now failed to win both of their opening two league matches for the first time since could understand the reaction of the home support."The fans have lacked the success they want for quite some time, so I understand the frustration," he said. "I didn't get too high on Tuesday, so we're not going to get too low today."We are at a point now at this club where something needed to change."The ownership has changed, there's a new coaching staff, there's new players, there's hopefully a new way of behaving in the training ground - properly, every single day, regarding standards and what's expected at this football club. So it's not a quick fix and this is not me coming out and making excuses."I think we change the manager from year to year and nothing really changes."So now it's about really changing the culture and the feel of the club day in and day out. That will end up in a good outcome. Good process, good people, will always end up in a good outcome. But maybe not so quickly as everyone wants." More egos or fewer? Former Rangers striker and assistant boss Billy Dodds told BBC Radio Scotland's Sportsound: "Russell Martin wants the players to put their egos to bed and concentrate on the football."But I think they need more egos at the club because egos come with top players."It took a man being sent off to get them going, but they deserved that draw in the end because they kept going at it."Like last season, Rangers found it difficult to break down a team domestically who sat back to defend their penalty box at Ibrox - and Thompson gave credit to Pressley."He has had a lot of stick in the early part of the season, but he got his tactics spot on," he Tavernier and midfielder Nicolas Raskin were two of four players dropped in midweek and were again on the bench against Tavernier came on to prove his goalscoring worth once more, while Martin admitted that "Raskin was great when he game on. He tackled more than the whole team".Meanwhile, centre-half Nasser Djiga is now in line to miss the Old Firm derby through suspension after his last-man red card against leaves Martin with questions over his personnel as matches come thick and Rangers forward Gordon Smith pointed out that Rangers were better when down to 10 men and were unfortunate that Cyriel Dessers was denied a late winner for he was left pondering: "How can they put that kind of performance in Europe and not in the league?"It is a conundrum that Martin is not the first Rangers team boss to have faced.

Everton ‘close in on Jack Grealish loan transfer with Toffees ready to pay huge portion of £300,000-a-week wages'
Everton ‘close in on Jack Grealish loan transfer with Toffees ready to pay huge portion of £300,000-a-week wages'

The Sun

time25 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Everton ‘close in on Jack Grealish loan transfer with Toffees ready to pay huge portion of £300,000-a-week wages'

EVERTON are closing in on a deal to land Jack Grealish on a season-long loan, reports suggest. Grealish, 29, has been deemed surplus to requirements by Pep Guardiola at Manchester City. But after struggling for game time last season, the England international is hoping to reignite his club career to earn his place back in Thomas Tuchel 's plans for the World Cup. And according to The Times, Grealish is closing in on a transfer to join David Moyes ' Everton. One of the main issues has been the former Aston Villa star's £300,000-a-week wages - possibly amounting to a package worth at least £12million. However, the Toffees will not let that be a sticking point as talks have continued with the belief Grealish is willing to move. Grealish has struggled to contribute goals at City in the way he did with Aston Villa, often being used as a foil to bring the ball upfield and win fouls in the final third rather than as the primary attacking threat. But if David Moyes is willing to unleash him in the way the Villans did, Grealish may be able to return to the levels seen during his time in the West Hidlands. Man City left Grealish at home during the Club World Cup and repeated that act for a pre-season friendly today in Italy against Palmero. Guardiola fielded two completely teams across the halves of football as the Cityzens triumphed 3-0, courtesy of a 25th Erling Haaland strike and a second half brace from Tijjani Reijnders. Everton have thus far signed five players this summer, including spending big money on Thierno Barry from Villarreal and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall from Chelsea. They have also seen three bids, the latest of which came out to £37m including add-ons, rejected by Southampton for Tyler Dibling. Jack Grealish has gone from eye-catching showman and heartthrob to miserable bench warmer - and I know who's to blame The 19-year-old was left out of the Saints squad to face Wrexham in their Championship opener - which they won 2-1. Southampton countered by demanding a package of £45m plus £5m in add-ons and a 25 per cent sell-on clause. Everton open their season with an away trip to newly-promoted Leeds before hosting Brighton in their first competitive fixture at the new 52,000-capacity Hill Dickinson Stadium. Meanwhile, Man City travel to Wolves on the opening weekend before hosting Tottenham at the Etihad.

Lark Atkin-Davies doubles up in Red Roses' power-packed win over France
Lark Atkin-Davies doubles up in Red Roses' power-packed win over France

The Guardian

time25 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Lark Atkin-Davies doubles up in Red Roses' power-packed win over France

England stormed to a 16th consecutive win over France in their final warmup match before the World Cup kicks off in two weeks. After a close-run Six Nations finale in April England's 6-40 win in Mont-de-Marsan was a reminder of the physical gulf between the cross-Channel rivals, with the visitors' pack instrumental in all six of their tries. It was fitting that the game, a friendly only in name, was scheduled amid the street festival season in south-west France – matches against Les Bleues are rarely dull affairs, even if the Red Roses have dominated Le Crunch for the last seven years. Both teams fielded relatively full-strength sides at the Stade André-et-Guy Boniface, home to the men's Pro D2 side Stade Montois. For John Mitchell's team, Marlie Packer's suspension and the head injury absence of Emily Scarratt were compensated for by the returns of Ellie Kildunne and the captain, Zoe Aldcroft. For Les Bleues, the scrum-half Pauline Bourdon-Sansus was the major absentee, as she serves a two-match suspension for criticism of the refereeing in the French domestic final. The hosts were keen to avoid the kind of lethargic start that has often cost them dear against elite teams. England, though, picked up where they left off in the 97-7 win over Spain, with a physically dominant start, spending most of the first 40 minutes in France's half. France Bourgeois; Grisez, Ménager (Cissokho 59), Neisen, Arbey; Arbez (Tuy 66), Chambon; T Feleu, Champon (Queyroi 66), Escudero, Fall, Raclot (Ikahehegi 70), M Feleu (Maka 59), Bernadou (Khalfaoui h/t), Bigot (Riffoneau 50), Deshaye (Brosseau 50). Sin-bin M Feleu 29. Pen Bourgeois (2). England Kildunne; Dow, Jones, Heard, Breach (Sing 72); Harrison, Hunt; Matthews, Kabeya (Ward 63), Aldcroft, Ward (Galligan 56), Talling (Feunati 56), Muir (Bern 56), Cokayne (Atkin-Davies 56), Botterman (Clifford 56). Tries Talling, Cokayne, Muir, Jones, Atkin-Davies (2). Cons Harrison (5) Referee Aimée Barrett-Theron (SA). The visitors were ahead within four minutes, Morwenna Talling scoring from a driving maul on the left after a lineout five metres out. The Red Roses' second try 10 minutes later came from the same routine, this time from the right and scored by Amy Cokayne. While Les Bleues did admirably to withstand the barrage of England attacks over the next 15 minutes, they were dealt another blow when their captain, Manaé Feleu, was shown a yellow card on the half-hour mark. France managed their first foray into England's 22 a few minutes later, yielding a penalty converted by Morgane Bourgeois. The Six Nations champions eventually made the most of their numerical advantage, though, with another driving maul seeing Maud Muir over the line. As has often been the case recent Le Crunch clashes, France emerged for the second half with a newfound urgency. Bourgeois added another three points within minutes of the restart, after an impressive drive through the heart of the England defence by Teani Feleu. England soon added a fourth try to dash any hopes of a comeback, though, with Megan Jones running in after a quick penalty from a five-metre scrum. The final half-hour was nevertheless a more balanced affair, with France stretching the opposition defence several times but undermining their efforts with repeated handling errors and poor discipline. Sign up to The Breakdown The latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewed after newsletter promotion Momentum swung back in England's direction in the final 10 minutes. After being held up by excellent France defence a couple of times, Atkin-Davies eventually went over for the visitors' fifth try five minutes from time. The Bristol front-rower soon scored her second. A late break from Joanna Grisez, appeared to promise a consolation try, taking Les Bleues to within five metres of the try-line. The resulting penalty was taken quickly, but a long kick straight into touch dashed any hopes of a score to get the 7,500-strong crowd back on their feet. While both sets of coaches had insisted before the match that the final result would not be their primary concern, a 16th consecutive win for England over France (and their biggest in 15 years) will provide vindication of the work done over their summer-long training camp. For the hosts, their lone warm-up match offered something of a reality check as to the physical and technical domination of the teams they have been aiming to rival. The two sides are expected to meet again in five weeks' time, this time in Bristol for a blockbuster World Cup semi-final. Before then, England face the USA in Sunderland on 22 August in the tournament's curtain-raiser, while Les Bleues take on Italy in Exeter the following day.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store