Scottish Daily Mail

Oh I say! Four days in and there’s only ONE Brit left at Wimbledon

Edmund is already our last hope after Konta and Katie crash out

- By Inderdeep Bains and Mario Ledwith

THE nation’s hopes were left weighing heavily on Kyle Edmund’s shoulders last night as he became the last Briton standing at Wimbledon.

The 23-year-old UK No 1 was the only home player to make it into the third round after Johanna Konta and Katie Boulter were sent crashing out yesterday.

And as if taking on Novak Djokovic next isn’t enough, Edmund also faces a different type of clash – the game is likely to coincide with England’s World Cup quarter-final with Sweden on Saturday. To add extra spice, Edmund’s coach Fidde Rosengren is Swedish.

Coming off Centre Court last night, Edmund said: ‘It will be interestin­g with the football. I’m very much looking forward to it.’ The passionate England supporter said he had not spoken to Wimbledon bosses about the scheduling of his match to avoid clashing with the game. ‘I don’t know who does it but I’m sure they will factor it in,’ he said. Asked if he wanted to play before or after the game, he said: ‘I don’t mind either way. I’m a tennis player so obviously I’m here to do my job first. Hopefully it will be a success for both of us.’

Yesterday Edmund, seeded 21, beat Bradley Klahn in straight sets.

His victory came after a disappoint­ing day for British women as Miss Konta and rising star Miss Boulter were knocked out.

Miss Konta reached the semi-finals last year but was beaten 6-3 6-4 by Dominika Cibulkova of Slovakia.

The 27-year-old British No 1 said: ‘I did the best that I could. I lost to a very good player.’

She said that the expectatio­ns of the nation did not affect her play, adding: ‘I’m here to satisfy my own expectatio­ns. I love playing here. That is regardless of what external factors are because that is very much out of my control.’

Miss Cibulkova would have been seeded, and thus avoided playing Miss Konta so early, but for the decision to give Serena Williams a seeding even though her world ranking had dropped following her maternity leave.

Miss Boulter, 21, lost in straight sets to 18th seed Naomi Osaka of Japan. It means that, following Andy Murray’s withdrawal, Edmund has been left flying the flag for Britain and our only hope of having any players in the second week of the singles.

He faces the daunting task of beating three-time Wimbledon champion Djokovic but the Yorkshirem­an said he was able to cope with the pressure, adding: ‘I just do the best I can, I’ve always approached it that way. The excitement from people and anticipati­on is all part of it. That’s normal...that’s the way it’s going to go.

‘Novak is one of the best players in the world and of all time... he is very dangerous. For me it’s a great experience to play against him’ Djokovic, 31, acknowledg­ed the weight on his opponent. The Serb said: ‘He’s a hometown favourite now that Murray is not here. There’s a lot of expectatio­ns and pressure on his back. But he’s handling it pretty well so far.’ However, fans should not be too pessimisti­c about Edmund’s chances. The Briton managed to beat Djokovic, who has returned from an elbow injury he suffered at Wimbledon last year, in their last contest at the Madrid Open in May.

THERE is something surprising­ly uplifting about being greeted by Tony Finnan, a 53-year-old grandfathe­r, outside southfield­s Tube station. Partly because Tony, a london black-cab driver who can squat lift more than 500lb, is offering discounted taxi rides — just £2.50 instead of a hot, sticky 15-minute walk — to the All England lawn Tennis Club on the hottest day imaginable. He is also fabulously chatty, extremely twinkly and boasts biceps the size of hams, which he flexes to impress at any opportunit­y.

But most people just enjoy the sheer brilliant silliness of his hair, which, for the 15th Wimbledon running, has been trimmed, buzzed and painted bright fluorescen­t yellow (complete with white seam) by his wife Carol so he now looks exactly like a giant human tennis ball.

There’s even a perfect black panther — the slazenger logo — on the back, just above his vast, bull-like neck.

‘It had to be slazenger! That’s the official Wimbledon ball!’ he says.

Tony, who lives just down the road from the Tennis Club — and is already hoarse after shouting ‘Taxi! Only two pounds fifty!’ from 5.10am — is one of the thousands, many of them enterprisi­ng locals, who form the Wimbledon community until a week on sunday.

Most never make it past the hallowed gates of Wimbledon to watch the action on Centre Court, eat overpriced strawberri­es and drink Pimm’s.

Instead they spend their (very long) days offering their services to the crowds outside the grounds — selling everything from ice cold water to picnic blankets, Panama hats, designer denim jackets, umbrellas (this week doubling as parasols) and sun cream.

Children write wonky signs on bits of cardboard and sell home-made lemonade. grannies bake scones and tea loaves. One lady on the main drag from the station is advertisin­g sewing lessons, for goodness sake. A very pale man in a vest, called Ricky — an ice-cream man in his other life — will be here from 7am to 10.30pm, selling iced water at £1 a bottle. ‘I’d never sell warm water, ever!’ he swears.

some rent out their gardens for parking (£50 a day) or to people running their own stalls.

OnE family have been paid to have their entire front garden transforme­d in to a Hawaiian paradise, complete with straw gazebo and fake grass, by a sunglasses manufactur­er in a bid to ‘increase brand awareness ’. Many of the Wimbledon fort night community work horrendous hours and make a huge amount of money.

Tennis-ball Tony will be here until 10pm tonight, will do 17-hour days for the rest of the tournament and couldn’t be happier about it — he earns a small fortune.

‘It’s a trade secret, but it’s absolutely worth doing. absolutely.’ This year he’s going to pay for his son Chris’s wedding in santorini. Although I suspect Tony might be here anyway.

‘I take a fortnight off my usual work and it’s like a holiday,’ he says. ‘It’s not as if the people are football hooligans, are they? They’re nice people. It’s a nice atmosphere.’ Because that’s the thing about Wimbledon, it is nice — and gloriously British.

Yes the Tube is overcrowde­d, the streets are seething and the sun is doing its best to shrivel the stunning purple, green and white hanging baskets, but somehow no one is shoving or pushing or being remotely irritable.

Even the thousands of hot, sweaty people in the vast, snaking mass who queue from 6am each day — first for a queue pass and then, again, to actually enter the grounds — are in good form, and arresting to look at in floral dresses and sunhats, teeny shorts and cropped tops, sport socks, daringly undone shirts, sandals and floppy cricket hats.

Meanwhile, the shops in the High street have gone tennis-mad. Tennis balls and the green, white and purple tournament livery colours are in every window

Ed savitt opened Dropshot, an independen­t coffee shop, just three weeks ago and is enjoying his ‘baptism of fire’. A few doors down, at DeRosier Chocolate & Coffee shop, chocolate tennis balls and chocolate racquets are flying off the shelves.

And everywhere you look are dozens of well-heeled and unfailingl­y polite volunteer stewards sporting bright orange hi-viz jackets, official armbands and a splendid array of Panama hats.

There is also an army of profession­al stewards, which includes Maurice, 68, a retired custody officer. His fluorescen­t yellow suit is almost too bright to look at as he barks happily at people wandering into the traffic with their noses deep in their phones.

Recently widowed Maurice is currently in the middle of summer’s stewarding ‘season’ and loving it.

‘I’ve just done Royal Ascot — I did the parking there — 4,000 cars!’ next he’s up to scotland for the European golf tour, followed by a trip to Everest Base Camp in October — something he’d always wanted to do — to commemorat­e his late wife. His fellow stewards are supporting him financiall­y.

He’ll be on his feet for 14 hours a day and then home for a long soak in the bath and a huge glass of red wine. ‘By the last sunday I’ll be dead on my feet,’ he chirps happily. ‘I do it every year!’

Maurice’s spot, a few hundred feet from the Club, is in the epicentre of Joanna Doniger’s rental empire, tennislond­on.co.

uk, a sort of posh Airbnb for people or corporates who can afford £12,000 for the fortnight, want sleek modern properties and Joanna at their beck and call.

This year, the heat has bought fresh challenges, including a glass shower cubicle that exploded in the heat (‘luckily no one was in it’), and requests for airconditi­oning units and top-ofthe-range fans.

none of which is demanded by the thousands camping out this week. There isn’t even a shower block in the official camping field.

‘It’s fine,’ says Rita, from Melton Mowbray, who is here for the full fortnight with friends gillian, Anne and Maggie. ‘We’ve got wet wipes and a bucket and we have a strip wash in the loos.’

This is their sixth year running and Maggie, 18 yesterday, couldn’t think of anywhere she’d prefer to spend her landmark birthday.

‘It’s such fun and everyone is kind and friendly,’ she says.

Even those who join me at the end of the queue at 12.05pm, where the temperatur­e is 29 degrees and the wait is six hours minimum, are full of the party spirit.

no one seems to care that the chances of getting in are minimal. not even the two ladies I meet who have moved just once (yes, really) since joining the queue at 7.15 this morning.

‘Time doesn’t exist any more,’ says Chris, from nottingham. ‘But we’re having a very nice time.’

More than half the campers aren’t even bothering to queue today. They’re just enjoying the scene, reading, sunbathing, playing football, listening to music.

natalie, a 33-year-old events organiser is here for the eighth year in a row. she and her friend lila, are stripped almost off in teeny bikinis and drinking gin and tonics garnished with strawberri­es.

‘Every year I want to see Andy Murray here and every year I’ve failed,’ says natalie.

NEXT door but one, the ladies are drinking Prosecco, bought from McClusky’s, a corner shop decked out in green and purple. ‘The nicest shop in the world!’ they trill in unison.

Eamon McClusky’s family have been running the shop for 62 years, but this promises to be their best yet. He has ordered 50 extra cases of Prosecco, gallons of Pimm’s and is overflowin­g with ice. He will be open from 6am to 11pm and has a ‘Wimbledon table’ selling everything from instant porridge to sunhats, sunglasses to sandwiches.

But not everyone’s in it for the money. Over the years, residents have raised tens of thousands for charity by renting out their drives, gardens and even homes.

some rabbis running a popular food stall are raising money for a local Jewish outreach programme.

And Jack and Chloe, selling Panama hats at £15 a pop outside a vast house on the main drag, tell me the ‘very, very nice’ lady who owns the house lets them have the spot in return for a donation to Macmillan Cancer support.

Wimbledon fortnight is about so much more than the tennis. It is a rite of passage. A wonderful two weeks where you can leave your normal life behind, work incredibly hard, laugh a lot, make a tidy nest egg — then spend the rest of the year looking forward to doing it all again next time.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Uh-oh! Fans dressed as Teletubbie­s cheer on Katie Boulter in vain
Uh-oh! Fans dressed as Teletubbie­s cheer on Katie Boulter in vain
 ??  ?? Down and out: Johanna Konta loses yesterday
Down and out: Johanna Konta loses yesterday
 ??  ?? Anyone for tennis? Fans soak up the atmosphere and, inset, Tony Finnan’s hair
Anyone for tennis? Fans soak up the atmosphere and, inset, Tony Finnan’s hair

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