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We played tennis today … but not like they did

The Gentlemen’s Singles Final at Wimbledon was on this afternoon – Novak Djokovic, the 36-year-old defending champion from Serbia, played against the 20-year-old Carlos Alcaraz from Spain. Both wanted to win, and both nearly did, but only one could claim the trophy.

The match went to five sets, with the two circling around the court like leopards, their reactions so quick, their bodies so supple, their concentration so intense. To be present, even from a distance, felt a huge privilege. It was like watching an epic duel through Attenborough eyes – two males of the same species, fighting for one prize – domination – their families waiting anxiously behind them. And it wasn’t just any two males, it was the ultimate two, the final pair, the bravest and best, the winners of endless contests to reach this point.

In the end, after over four hours, the victory went to Carlos Alcaraz, the third youngest winner in Wimbledon history. The man who lost, Djokovic, accepted his defeat like a player among players, head high, wearing his wounds lightly, and acknowledging the achievement of the first team to have knocked him from his Wimbldedon centre court pedestal since 2013.

What a moment in tennis.

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023

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Hot enough in London today

The sun was shining, the breeze was cool, and the rain dabbed here and there, but nothing too serious – the perfect day to stroll along the South Bank and then over Millennium Bridge to St Paul’s.

We looked in on the beautiful craft shops on the first floor of the Oxo Tower, and then wandered on past Tate Modern, and the schools out for end of term trips, their uniforms and chat filling the grass beneath the trees. Buskers took up the edges before the airy bridge over the river.

The Morph, dressed ‘in London’ above, was outside the Tourist Information Centre, one of a whole tribe, each dressed differently, who we came across dotted around the City. Their pedestals, and each has one, includes information on Whizz Kids, a charity for young wheelchair users. I’ve just looked them up and I see the Morph tribe are all part of Morph’s Epic Art Adventure.

After lunch near St Paul’s, loving the indoor cool, we only had time for a quick walk around the Smithfield area, looking in on the church of St Bartholomew the Great, then over the Barbican, past the Ironmongers’ Hall, and on, too fast, and too hot, to catch a train from Waterloo.

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023

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When a ceilidh comes to town

Photograph by Diana Fraser-Mackenzie

It was fast and fun, and in London.

Kilts and fiddle music, a spring in the floor, and a caller to keep the formations whirling. Part Scottish reeling, part barn dance, and two parts of give-it-a-go, enough knew enough, and on it span.

Why did it work? Because the young crowd from Scotland had danced in their PE lessons. Through primary school and adolescence they had kept dancing, now here they were, a decade on, owning the floor and taking the rest of us with them .

It made me wonder, as hearts pumped and bodies got caught in the wrong direction, why is there no dancing in PE in English schools? Or is there? It’s great exercise, social, non-competitive, accessible. Plus it would give everyone a chance to keep up.

Two pieces of advice to anyone contemplating a ceilidh – go for it, but take off your shoes before you start.

Here, is a link to comedian Danny Bhoy’s brilliant description of a ceilidh.

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023