Daily Dispatch

GRASS WILL BE GREENER

Wimbledon head groundsman looks to the future

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Neil Stubley should have been nervously appraising how the grass he and his fellow Wimbledon ground staff had nurtured was faring on the first day of the Grand Slam.

Instead, the head groundsman at the All England Club has seen the “blood, sweat and tears” spent in preparing for the tournament come to nothing.

The championsh­ips, due to start on Monday, were cancelled for the first time since World War II due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, meaning Novak Djokovic and Simona Halep were denied the chance to defend their titles.

Stubley said it was surreal to walk around and see his 38 “babies“, as he calls the courts, set in 42 acres in the leafy London suburb, not humming with action.

“A lot of blood, sweat and tears has gone in to showcase them,” he told an online press conference.

“But that disappoint­ment is across the (All England) club. We are all very proud of the work we do and how well received it is across the world.”

The grandly titled head of courts and horticultu­re at Wimbledon said the grounds felt bizarrely quiet for this time of year, similar to the atmosphere after the players had gone home.

“It is an odd time and the best way to really describe it is you kind of get a strange quiet feeling,” he said.

“I would equate it to having been to a concert — you get that ringing in your ears for a couple of days.”

Stubley said he and his 17 staff plus three temporary workers, reduced from the usual nine, were getting on with the job despite the disappoint­ment of the cancellati­on.

“Pride pushes you that way to carry on working,” he said. “Of course it is disappoint­ing not to be playing but the bigger picture puts that into perspectiv­e.

“As much as we love our job it has to sit in the real world.”

Stubley defended the decision in April to cancel the championsh­ips even though other sports have returned, saying it was about much more than the playing surface.

“The grass courts were fine when it was cancelled,” he said. “It is the infrastruc­ture that takes time. It is not a case of saying two weeks out we can play them.

“There is an eight to 10-week spell to get it ready. Come early April, in the midst of the pandemic, it was untenable.

“Even now, with the restrictio­ns in place, it would be impossible to hold them.” Stubley said the groundstaf­f would follow their usual routines and instead aim for next season.

“I always try and get across to people you are not repairing the courts, you are preparing for next season,” he said.

“Come August early September it will be the same process rip the courts up, re-seed them, grow through autumn and winter and the same prep work for the 2021 championsh­ips.”

The groundsman said his most memorable moment at Wimbledon was when Andy Murray won his first Wimbledon singles title in 2013, becoming the first British male to do so since Fred Perry in 1936.

“To be on centre court for that winning moment is one when the hairs on the back of your neck stand up,” he said.

“Ironically, I was looking at Murray’s feet.

“I am always seeing how the courts are performing, so it was not until I looked up and saw he had dropped his racquet that I realised he had won match point and the title. ”—

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 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES ?? DEFENDER: Simona Halep poses with the trophy after defeating Serena Williams in the 2019 Wimbledon women's singles final
Picture: GETTY IMAGES DEFENDER: Simona Halep poses with the trophy after defeating Serena Williams in the 2019 Wimbledon women's singles final

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