
Wimbledon diary: Tarvet's prize money mystery and Bear Grylls in the box
Some players this week have been suggesting that the courts are slower than usual this year, a topic of discussion that always throws up some confusion, not least since players can be the worst judges of all when it comes to court speed. There's no doubt that the courts (and balls) have slowed in the past 25 years and the days of Boris Becker diving around the net are long gone. But serve and volley, contrary to popular opinion, is not quite dead yet. Maybe it was because he was enjoying himself so much against Dan Evans on Thursday, but Novak Djokovic served and volleyed six times, winning all six points. It can be done.
The replacement of line judges by electronic line-calling has been widely appreciated by most players, but some appear to miss the old traditions. Corentin Moutet, the talented but volatile Frenchman, likes nothing more than a heated discussion but when one of his serves was called out, his incredulity quickly abated when he realised there was no one to argue with. When he asked the umpire if it was out, the reply was 'apparently', immediately dissipating any prospect of an escalation.
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The Royal Box included an eclectic mix of personalities on day four, from the actors Rory Kinnear and Niamh Cusack to the former home secretary William Hague, the former Undertones frontman-turned environmental campaigner Feargal Sharkey and Eliza Manningham-Buller, the former head of MI5. Also in the box was Bear Grylls, the adventurer and TV personality. Grylls was part of a panel discussion at Wimbledon this morning looking at 'how we maximise our platforms using sport and entertainment to inspire action on protecting nature'. Grylls, by the way, once made Roger Federer eat fish eyeballs in the Swiss Alps.

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BBC News
13 minutes ago
- BBC News
Brook and Root steady England after India's new-ball burst
Update: Date: 18:59 BST 3 July Title: Join us on day three... Content: England have plenty to do tomorrow to stay in this Test match. They are going to have battle and chip away at India's mammoth first-innings total. If you have missed any of the action from today you can watch highlights on BBC Four at 19:00 BST or via iPlayer. Scroll down to read the reaction and highlights after the close. Also make sure you check out Matthew Henry's report from Edgbaston. We will, of course, be back with live coverage at 10:30 tomorrow morning for day three with the Test Match Special team providing ball-by-ball commentary. Here's some stories which might be of interest between now then. Update: Date: 18:57 BST 3 July Title: 'Not fussed what's said outside' Content: England coach Jeetan Patel, speaking to BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra: "The new ball tonight did a little bit and we got it to go as well, so it feels like a little bit of the new ball working at the moment but the boys put in some graft and 150 overs in the dirt takes a lot out of people." Reflecting on the toss: "We won't. I don't think you reflect on what's happened. Hindsight's hindsight. We decided to bowl and we'll stick by that. On the first day it showed enough for us and we created a lot of opportunities and it didn't go our way. The day might've looked different yesterday and this morning if we got those decisions. "People are going to look at any scorecard and make a decision on what they're going to think. I'm not really fussed and I don't think any of us are fussed about what's said outside of the group." On the group's fitness: "The fitness is alright, the boys are just tired. It's taken a lot out of the boys. It was a longer spell than I thought Brooky [Harry Brook] would've bowled." Update: Date: 18:53 BST 3 July Title: Post Content: England suffered a top-order wobble when Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope made ducks and were swiftly followed back into the pavilion by Zak Crawley. However, Joe Root and Harry Brook steadied the ship somewhat. Even if Brook's aggressive approach was questioned at times. They will resume unbeaten on 18 and 30 respectively on Friday. This video can not be played India take two wickets in two balls as England fall to 13-2 This video can not be played Crawley is caught by Nair off the bowling of Siraj Update: Date: 18:52 BST 3 July Title: Get Involved Content: #bbccricket, via WhatsApp on 03301231826 or text 81111 (standard network charges apply) This is the hole England would have found themselves in at Headlingley had it not been for the obliging Indian collapse. This time it went to script. Simon, Hackney Update: Date: 18:50 BST 3 July Title: Post Content: Steven FinnFormer England fast bowler on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra The fact that this felt like quite a long, slow innings when India scored at almost four an over is strange looking back now, but that was tough Test match cricket. That intensity is what makes me worry about players coming into Test matches without the proper preparation beforehand. Update: Date: 18:50 BST 3 July Title: Post Content: Of course, we should not forget that earlier today Shubman Gill produced a stellar innings as he made the top score by an Indian in England with his majestic 269. This video can not be played Gill reaches 250 runs against England This video can not be played Vaughan analysis of Gill's batting 'masterclass' Update: Date: 18:49 BST 3 July Title: Get Involved Content: #bbccricket, via WhatsApp on 03301231826 or text 81111 (standard network charges apply) I think the pile-on merchants should just take a step back and reflect on what this England team are capable of doing in turning round what seems to be a slam dunk defeat into a victory. It's day two for goodness sake!! Neil from Chester. Update: Date: 18:46 BST 3 July Title: Post Content: Michael VaughanFormer England captain on BBC Test Match Special So far in this Bazball era they either blow teams away, chase brilliant or they get hammered. They don't play the boring draw because they've never had to. I'll be intrigued to see what happens if England lose a few quick ones tomorrow and if they think we have to dig deep. Update: Date: 18:45 BST 3 July Title: Get Involved Content: #bbccricket, via WhatsApp on 03301231826 or text 81111 (standard network charges apply) The crazy thing about Bazball is that nobody knows whether 77-3 at the end of the second day in response to 587 is a good day or not. From Peter Price in Morecambe Update: Date: 18:40 BST 3 July Title: Post Content: Michael VaughanFormer England captain on BBC Test Match Special I'm not too sure what England will be thinking. I hope Ben Stokes is thinking, 'we should've batted first'. The way that England bowled today was a slight concern. There were a few things I saw in the field which made me think this looks a bit ominous going forward. Sometimes you bat first to grind the opposition into the dirt and that's what England looked like. They played three tired shots. It couldn't have gone any better for India. They got lucky because Shubman Gill wanted to bowl first and I don't know why you would even consider that. Update: Date: 18:39 BST 3 July Title: Post Content: India captain Shubman Gill speaking to Sky Sports: "Good position to be in with England three down. Hopefully we get a good start tomorrow." On his batting form: "I worked on a few things before the series and after the IPL. Looking at the results, those things are working for me." On what India worked on after the first Test: "Getting the catches was really good confidence for us. Fielding is something we spoke about going into this match. If we were half as good [at Headingley], the result would have been different." Update: Date: 18:35 BST 3 July Title: England 77-3 at stumps Content: Harry Brook sees off the final delivery. That's stumps. India's day, without any shadow of a doubt. Update: Date: 18:35 BST 3 July Title: Post Content: Michael VaughanFormer England captain on BBC Test Match Special Harry Brook does well not to stand on his stumps there. Update: Date: 19.5 overs Title: Eng 77-3 Content: This video can not be played That's one way to avoid being bowled A square drive from Harry Brook for four off Prasidh Krishna. This partnership now worth a 50. Next ball, Brook jabs one into the pitch and is then like Bambi on ice as the ball loops up and is heading back down towards his stumps. Brook resists the urge to punch the ball - ala Graham Gooch - and instead shoulder barges the ball away. Update: Date: 19.3 overs Title: Eng 73-3 Content: Heart-in-mouth stuff from Joe Root as he takes on a bouncer from Prasidh Krishna and top edges it towards deep square, but the ball does not carry. Three balls left in the day. Harry Brook to face them. Update: Date: 19.2 overs Title: Eng 72-3 Content: Two dots to Joe Root from Prasidh Krishna to start the final over. Update: Date: 18:31 BST 3 July Title: Get Involved Content: #bbccricket, via WhatsApp on 03301231826 or text 81111 (standard network charges apply) Ollie Pope, Josh Tongue, Brydon Carse, Shoaib Bashir - none of them are good enough for Test cricket. I don't care about Pope's hundreds, he's shockingly inconsistent. Drop them all for the next Test and start building a team that can actually complete Down Under. Brett, Leeds Update: Date: 19 overs Title: Eng 72-3 Content: Despite Harry Brook's procrastination, India manage to get round quickly enough to get one more over in. To be bowled by Prasidh Krishna. Update: Date: 18.4 overs Title: Eng 72-3 Content: Harry Brook is backing away to leg between deliveries from Ravindra Jadeja, trying to ensure this is the last over. But he gets a ticking off from the square-leg umpire. Update: Date: 18:28 BST 3 July Title: Post Content: Michael VaughanFormer England captain on BBC Test Match Special We all know England don't play for draws. India look like they're going to dangle the carrot and not let them score at five or six an over.


The Guardian
13 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Digested week: Wimbledon joy and the canny PR of the Dalai Lama
As someone who enjoys the women's tennis at Wimbledon, so to speak, the tournament's opening days are an annual joy and this week has been electric. Emma Raducanu leads the rise in British women powering up the world rankings, which makes the era of women's tennis I grew up in – I have a lot of time for Jo Durie, but those were hard years – seem like the 19th century. Today, after two stunning opening-round matches, Raducanu will meet Aryna Sabalenka, the mighty Belarusian world number one, which means tomorrow I will be on court one (in the park) knocking imaginary clay dust from my shoes and pretending to be in the final. If the tennis is sublime, the crowd so far has been slightly under par – although it's early days. Last year, the title of Wimbledon best dressed went for my money to Greta Gerwig, in a tan suit the provenance of which I still can't track down, as well as Zendaya in Ralph Lauren and Julia Roberts in Gucci. This week in the royal box and around the grounds we've had Cate Blanchett, who is welcome in any setting, Olivia Rodrigo and Russell Crowe, who combed his hair and dug out a tie for Centre Court. (Esquire ran a story about the £65,000 Rolex he was wearing, which if it was intended to set us against him, won't work – I won't hear a word against Rusty.) There were also, as usual, a high turn out of what my teenage tennis partner and I used to refer to nastily as Midweek Ladies, a crowd who, off-court, wear floral, ankle length dresses in pale shades and on court, are always one double fault away from losing their nerve and reverting to an underhand serve. Everyone should watch My Mom Jayne, the documentary about Jayne Mansfield made by her daughter Mariska Hargitay, released this week on HBO Max and a jaw-dropper of revelations and sadness. You may know Hargitay from her role as Detective Olivia Benson in Law & Order: SVU – I didn't even know she was Mansfield's daughter – and she was three years old in 1967 when her 34-year-old mother was killed in a car crash outside New Orleans. The film is heartbreaking, not least because Hargitay, who has no memories of her mother, was in the car with her siblings when it crashed. All three children survived and were raised by their father, but as Hargitay reports, she grew up feeling vaguely ashamed of her mother, a Hollywood sex bomb who spoke in a breathy voice that a generation later fell out of usage. As Hargitary digs into the history of the mother she never knew, she discovers Mansfield was an accomplished pianist and violinist, a brilliant, ambitious woman trapped by the only persona Hollywood allowed her – until now. Finally, someone has greeted the release of a new Brad Pitt movie not with praise-be gratitude for America's ageing sweetheart, but by looking at Pitt's success in shrugging off an allegation of domestic abuse. While in most of the entertainment press, Pitt's new film is treated to the customary chuckling puff piece, New York magazine runs the headline Brad Pitt is Fooling You and proceeds to get into it: the actor's image preservation, the crisis management PR he retains (former client: Johnny Depp) and the details of Angelina Jolie's allegation that he assaulted her and one of their children on a private plane. As the piece concludes, nobody cares. There's been a vibe shift since #MeToo, which let's not forget, Brad Pitt's production company, Plan B, aligned itself with by co-producing the movie adaptation of She Said, about the exposing of Harvey Weinstein – a sterling piece of allyship from America's most sensitive male feminist, or something else entirely. Either way, nothing sticks. In the last five years, the worst coverage Pitt has had is for Bullet Train. There was a story in the Sun mid-week about Pitt's ex, Jennifer Anniston, or rather, about a 43-year-old man from Southampton who believed himself to be in a Facebook relationship with the Hollywood star, who had reached out to him asking for a loan. That might have been your first clue, Paul, that something about this – hard to put your finger on what exactly – didn't smell right. It wasn't the first time the unfortunate victim had been targeted over social media by scam accounts claiming to be Hollywood stars. But when 'Jennifer Anniston' sent him a copy of her driving license, along with the message 'I love you', it was enough to clinch things and convince the hapless Facebook user he was at the start of a beautiful relationship. As requested, he sent the former Friends star the £200 of Apple gift cards she was asking for and never heard from her again. Oh, to have the confidence of the Dalai Lama that we'll all get a second go-around at this. Ahead of his 90th birthday this weekend, the Tibetan spiritual leader discussed arrangements for his successor, by which, per Buddhist beliefs, he means the body into which he will be reincarnated. This is as much a political as a spiritual consideration and in his address, the Dalai Lama pushed back against the Chinese government's insistence on preapproving the reincarnation, remaining firm that when the time comes, he'll be reincarnated in line with Tibetan tradition and with no interference from Beijing. He has also dangled some spoilers, suggesting, tantalisingly, that the new Dalai Lama may not be a baby, as he was, and – in what would represent a reboot more shocking than the new Dr Who and Ghostbusters combined – may not even be male. Which goes to show that even spiritual leaders these days have a canny knack for PR.


Daily Mail
18 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Wimbledon star wears black ribbon in tribute to Diogo Jota after Liverpool star's tragic death - as club relaxes strict 148-year dress code to allow players to pay their respects
Wimbledon star Francisco Cabral has stepped onto court sporting a black ribbon on his shirt sleeve in tribute to his compatriot Diogo Jota in the wake of the Liverpool star's tragic death on Thursday morning. The Portugual international was driving through Zamora in northern Spain with his brother Andre Silva in a bid to catch a ferry that would take him back to England to link up with his side ahead of pre-season. The 28-year-old's death has plunged both his home country and his adopted one into mourning, with Premier League fans travelling to Anfield to pay tribute to the forward. In SW19, the All England Club announced that they would relax their stringent all-white rules for players on-court to allow those who wished to sport armbands or tributes to do so. Cabral heard of Jota's death as he was making his way into Wimbledon ahead of his doubles clash with Jamie Murray and Rajeev Ram, and told Mail Sport that although he didn't know the player personally, he knew through a mutual friend that he was a 'great guy'. 'Very, very sad news, not only in the sports world but in Portugal overall, because he's such an idol, such an icon, such a good person,' Cabral said on Thursday. 'I got the news when I was driving to Wimbledon. I just wish all the best for his family. I know they have good people around them so I hope they can get through it. 'I know what he's been through, what he conquered through his career and through his life. So he's just very inspiring for me.' Doubles world No40 Cabral and his partner Lucas Miedler are facing off with Petr Nouza and Patrik Riki on Court No5 for a spot in the third round of the men's doubles. Another doubles player, Liverpool superfan Neal Skupski, also suggested that he might sport an armband for his mixed clash alongside US star Desirae Krawczyk, which also takes place on Friday. The British star suffered a double heartbreak on Thursday as he learned that his grandmother had also passed away after he and partner Joe Salisbury defeated Joshua Paris and Charles Broom. 'It's been a tough day,' said Skupski. 'I found out this morning that Jota had passed away and then I just found out my nan had passed today as well, so it's been a very tough day.' Skupski had brought a black armband with him, but opted not to wear it as he was aware that his grandmother was unwell. He did however hint that 'in the coming days', he might consider doing so.