Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma (Raducanu) - Tennis From: Dave the Gnome Date: 12 Sep 21 - 05:10 PM Out of interest I looked up Virginia Wade and although she was born here she was brought up in South Africa. So the last female grand slam winner was the reverse of Emma :-D Who was out front with Martina earlier? Was it Jimmy Connors? |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma (Raducanu) - Tennis From: gillymor Date: 12 Sep 21 - 05:03 PM Rocket Rod Laver was there. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma (Raducanu) - Tennis From: Dave the Gnome Date: 12 Sep 21 - 04:47 PM She was there, as was Tim Henman. Lots of other tennis stars too but I only remember Billie Jean King by name |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma (Raducanu) - Tennis From: gillymor Date: 12 Sep 21 - 04:18 PM I was just rattlin' cages, Dave. I didn't have the sound on yesterday but I think I saw a silver-haired "Our Ginny" Wade court side. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma (Raducanu) - Tennis From: Dave the Gnome Date: 12 Sep 21 - 04:13 PM Far from nationalistic from me, gilly. See my earlier points about Britain being a mix of all nations. I don't think one nation can claim Emma but I am proud to be a member of the same club as her :-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma (Raducanu) - Tennis From: gillymor Date: 12 Sep 21 - 03:48 PM I haven't seen this much nationalistic fervor around here since old ake was trying to claim "Donal John" for Scotland. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma (Raducanu) - Tennis From: Backwoodsman Date: 12 Sep 21 - 03:45 PM ‘Those colonials’ are sulking because their girl lost… ;-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma (Raducanu) - Tennis From: punkfolkrocker Date: 12 Sep 21 - 03:43 PM Shame she's not a competitive cyclist or equestrian... .. We'll never get the sports news headline "Emma Rides.."... |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma (Raducanu) - Tennis From: Dave the Gnome Date: 12 Sep 21 - 03:23 PM Those colonials just don't understand, Steve ;-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma (Raducanu) - Tennis From: Steve Shaw Date: 12 Sep 21 - 02:11 PM Grrr...who changed my title...grrr... |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit & other UK political topics From: SPB-Cooperator Date: 12 Sep 21 - 09:31 AM In my view the reaction to Emma Raducann's success does have a bearing on discussion on UK politics, and highlights the hierocracy of a government which on one hand is committed to anti-immigration policy and on the other jumps on the bandwagon on praising her success - and the likes of fagarse who has also jumped on the bandwagon while having a history of and Romanian rhetoric and shit-stirring. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: punkfolkrocker Date: 12 Sep 21 - 08:47 AM My wife woke me up from my 'oh no, not tennis again' slumber, to say "she won...!!!".. Note to Nationalists:.. not "we won...!!!"... [.. though this is the same wife who is a defiantly pround nationalist whenever Welsh teams or individuals are competing in any sport...] |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Dave the Gnome Date: 12 Sep 21 - 08:03 AM Competitive Morris. The next national pastime:-) Who remembers "The Cloggies" by Bill Tidy? |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: BobL Date: 12 Sep 21 - 07:59 AM In my rapper sword dancing (look it up) days, we wouldn't put the swords back in the box unless blood had been drawn at some point. Sorry, I drift. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Steve Shaw Date: 12 Sep 21 - 06:13 AM And in football, FIFA's rules state that a player who is bleeding must leave the field and can't return until the bleeding has stopped. If there's blood on the shirt, shorts or socks, they must be replaced with clean apparel. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Bonzo3legs Date: 12 Sep 21 - 06:12 AM Newstead Wood Grammar School must be very proud!!! |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Steve Shaw Date: 12 Sep 21 - 06:03 AM I looked up the official Grand Slam rule on a bleeding injury: "If a player is bleeding, the Chair Umpire must stop play as soon as possible, and the Sports Physiotherapist must be called to the court by the Chair Umpire for evaluation and treatment. The Sports Physiotherapist, in conjunction with the Tournament Doctor if appropriate, will evaluate the source of the bleeding, and will request a Medical Time-Out for treatment if necessary. If requested by the Sports Physiotherapist and/or Tournament Doctor, the Referee in consultation with the Grand Slam Supervisor or Chair Umpire may allow up to a total of five (5) minutes to assure control of the bleeding. If blood has spilled onto the court or its immediate vicinity, play must not resume until the blood spill has been cleaned appropriately." Leylah needed to have been a bit calmer and more philosophical about it. After all, the interruption disrupted the flow of both players equally, there was clearly no jiggerypokery going on and the correct procedure was being followed. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Steve Shaw Date: 12 Sep 21 - 05:51 AM I've never been a fan myself. I think it became boring when rackets became super-powerful. I loved watching Rod Laver when I was a lad. And I can't bear those bloody yahoos in the crowd at Wimbledon who want to be the last to shut up before the next serve. Another aspect I dislike is the seeding system, a ham-fisted way of "saving the best 'til last." What's great about Emma and Leylah's triumph is that they both smashed their way, gloriously unseeded, through all that nonsense. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Bonzo3legs Date: 12 Sep 21 - 05:31 AM No we don't, we live 2 minutes drive from "enclosed" open fields - ie "the country"!!!!!!! I must add that I cannot stand tennis, a sport with the most ludicrous scoring!! |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Steve Shaw Date: 12 Sep 21 - 05:22 AM People who live or lived within five miles of me: John Nettles, Tori Amos, Thom Yorke... But it's not fair. I live in the middle of nowhere whereas you live right in t'middle of t'smoke! |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Bonzo3legs Date: 12 Sep 21 - 05:14 AM Emma lives about 5 miles from us !! Very well done to her, an exemplar to her generation, and note that she speaks properly too!! |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Backwoodsman Date: 12 Sep 21 - 05:01 AM It’s the ‘Murkan way, Dave - where we excel at ‘Pomp & Circumstance’, the ‘Murkans do ‘No Bizness Like Show Bizness’. And, of course, whilst they all loudly proclaim their faith in ‘Aawl-maa-a-aah-tee Gaa-a-ad’, their true god is money. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: gillymor Date: 12 Sep 21 - 04:52 AM There wasn't a lot of defensive tennis going on there, both girls seem to go for winners at any opportunity, just the kind of play I like to see. When Osaka gets it together again the three of them could form an interesting triumvirate for some time to come a la the now fading Federer, Nadal and Djokovic one on the men's side. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Dave the Gnome Date: 12 Sep 21 - 03:43 AM I must admit that I am no big sports fan but if every match was like that I'd become a tennis fan tomorrow. My heart was racing, I cheered. I gasped and, most important to this grasshopper mind, it wasn't too long :-) No tantrums and the stress only showed slightly on Laylah when, after pulling back two match points, she had to wait for Emma's injury to be treated. If that injury had been on the professional football field (Sorry Steve) I suspect the injured party would have been carried off! Some minor things away from the match. I thought the rendition of "The Star Spangled Banner" was particularly horrendous. Why do they have to do that strange warbling? I know I am shallow for this but I took an instant dislike to Laylah's sulky looking little sister and wish they hadn't kept panning the camera to her. I thought it was a bit crass to mention the prize money and have the bank present it to her. And, finally, when did "Sweet Caroline" become the anthem for all English sports? |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit & other UK political topics From: The Sandman Date: 12 Sep 21 - 02:30 AM Emma Raducanu's extraordinary run at the US Open finished in glorious fashion in New York as the 18-year-old became Britain's first female singles Grand Slam champion for 44 years.Raducanu was born on 13 November 2002 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, to Ian and Renee, who originate from Bucharest, Romania, and Shenyang, Liaoning, China, respectively. The original spelling of her family name in Romanian is Raducanu (pronounced [r?du'kanu]) Another example of a positive that an immigrant has brought to the UK. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Backwoodsman Date: 12 Sep 21 - 12:56 AM A great performance by both players, but the best woman won, IMHO. ‘Best’ in that she handled the pressure with amazing maturity and, unlike her opponent, Emma didn’t allow herself to be distracted by the unfortunate injury. Otherwise, both were immensely powerful hitters, playing with intensity and determination and, in truth, neither deserved to lose. In the end, maturity held out. Surely Emma Raducanu’s rise is one of the most astonishing stories of our time in sport, a real breath of fresh air. But, until now, she’s almost had the proverbial ‘nothing to lose’ - let’s hope that the intense physicality of her game, and the pressure that her astronomic rise will inevitably bring, don’t take their toll and she can continue to grace the courts in the top flight of tennis for many years to come. Well done Emma! You won with power, skill, grace, and personality - you did the game of tennis proud… |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Steve Shaw Date: 11 Sep 21 - 06:54 PM Well (and excuse me...) bugger me sideways! I can judge a football match for quality but I'm not too good with tennis, but that was intense, it was ferocious, it was evenly matched, it was seat of pants, it was QUALITY (I thought so anyway). I honestly didn't want either of them to lose. They were both beautifully smiley, they love each other, etc., but forget all that, above all they are both bloody good tennis players. A lovely shaft of unalloyed sunlight after eighteen months of misery. Go Emma! Go Leylah! |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: gillymor Date: 11 Sep 21 - 06:19 PM Radu is fun to watch, she just hits out and keeps the pedal to the metal. 18 year old qualifier wins the whole shebang and doesn't drop a set. Amazing! |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Tattie Bogle Date: 11 Sep 21 - 06:18 PM Very well done “Our Emma”! |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Charmion Date: 11 Sep 21 - 06:15 PM I see that Toronto has clobbered Montreal; Leylah Fernandez is out of the tournament and Emma Radcanu carries on. Still very interesting! But the Canadian journos will all be in tears tomorrow. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Dave the Gnome Date: 11 Sep 21 - 06:13 PM Just... WOW :-D |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Tattie Bogle Date: 11 Sep 21 - 04:37 PM The match has now started, after much preamble. So, Emma’s opponent is Canadian: and to keep BWM happy, she was born in Montreal. But she has a Hispanic-sounding name but looks Asian: her father is from Ecuador and her mother is described as Filipino Canadian. I don’t have a problem with any of that, given that the world is getting smaller and more multi-racial all the time: in the words of the song “It’s a great big melting pot”. Now excuse me while I watch the match, and COME ON EMMA! |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Backwoodsman Date: 11 Sep 21 - 04:31 PM For ‘debasement’ please read ‘diminution’ - I thought of one word but typed a different one! |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Backwoodsman Date: 11 Sep 21 - 04:29 PM Good points Dave. I just fear that your approach to the issue will result in the dilution and debasement of the system of national representation and, ultimately, render it meaningless. But hey, we disagree - I’m fine with that, let’s leave it there, there’s a game of tennis to watch! ;-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Dave the Gnome Date: 11 Sep 21 - 03:25 PM I don't mind anyone being out of step as long as it doesn't affect the whole platoon:-) In this day and age I think it unreasonable to expect an accident of birth to dictate who people represent in their chosen field. Globalisation, migration and even asylum moves people in ways that have never occurred before. In the worst case, would you expect an Afghan child, taken to safety by their parents 20 years ago, to return to that country to represent them at anything? Of course not. People should be able to, within reason, chose their own nationality and where they live rather than be forced to an identity that was none of their own doing. But, hey,that's just this child of the universe talking :-D Anyway, she's on court in half an hour. COME ON EMMA!!!! |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: punkfolkrocker Date: 11 Sep 21 - 03:17 PM Anyway.. two traditional British fingers up to the nationalists...!!! Tennis players doing it for their country...??? Bollocks.. they do it for themselves and their own personal fortunes... |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Backwoodsman Date: 11 Sep 21 - 01:03 PM 24 years? If only! That 2 should be a 7! :-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Backwoodsman Date: 11 Sep 21 - 12:55 PM ”I did read the title, John, which is why I said I feel quite entitled to call her ours. I suspect we are at cross purposes and not wishing to get any further involved in pointless semantics I shall gracefully withdraw :-) “ No problem Dave, it’s very interesting to hear different sides in a discussion, especially when the other person has your kind of personal experience. I almost completely agree with you, my only difference seems to be that I strongly believe that, when representing a country, a sportsman/woman should be a native of that country, born there. Perhaps I’m out of step with others here - it doesn’t bother me one jot, I’ve spent the past 24 years being the guy who’s out of step, I’m very well accustomed to it! ;-) :-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Dave the Gnome Date: 11 Sep 21 - 11:02 AM I dunno if she is a UK citizen, Charmion, but as she has been here since she was 2, has been educated here and trained here in her chosen field, I don't think it matters much :-) As the son of a Polish immigrant who was proud to be accepted as a British citizen I like to think that the British people, for all their faults, do welcome others with open arms. What tickled me not long ago though was our press reaction to another tennis start - Andy Murray. When he was winning he was British but whenever he lost he regained his native Scottish nationality :-D |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Charmion Date: 11 Sep 21 - 10:38 AM Yeah, well, Robin, the attacks on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon did not happen in Britain, now, did it? Or, indeed, Canada, although airspace in this country was also closed and our airfields had to catch most of the flights that were diverted from American destinations. The navel of the world may have relocated to the United States, but we don't have to spend *all* our time gazing into it. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler Date: 11 Sep 21 - 10:29 AM I find it interesting that the news headlines are just as keen on talking about her as talking about the 20th anniversary of the twin towers attack. The second thought is that niether of the contestants in the tennis match had been born when that happened. So, this is news as opposed to the "olds" that we get so much of. Good luck to both of them (but with a bias to "Our Emma"). Robin |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Charmion Date: 11 Sep 21 - 10:02 AM Is young Emma a UK citizen yet? If so, she's yours and you're stuck with her however she performs. Since she was born in Toronto, she was already a subject of Her Maj when she arrived, although the Canadian passport doesn't say so any more. I have been following the adventures of "our" Leylah Fernandez in the same tournament. Born in Montreal of Ecuadoran refugee parents and currently a resident of Boynton Beach, Florida, she is a typical successful Canadian. Her Dad is all over the papers being over the moon. Incidentally, these two young athletes are working out yet another phase of the age-old Montreal v Toronto rivalry that formed eastern Canada as we know it. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Steve Shaw Date: 11 Sep 21 - 09:34 AM She was a toddler here, she went to primary school here, she went to secondary school here, she learned her tennis here. One of us! |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Dave the Gnome Date: 11 Sep 21 - 09:13 AM I did read the title, John, which is why I said I feel quite entitled to call her ours. I suspect we are at cross purposes and not wishing to get any further involved in pointless semantics I shall gracefully withdraw :-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Steve Shaw Date: 11 Sep 21 - 09:11 AM It clashes with the second half of the Last Night Of The Proms. Grr... Maybe Emma will win it just in time for us to sing Land Of Hope And Glory. How fitting that would be! ;-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: punkfolkrocker Date: 11 Sep 21 - 08:54 AM Bloody tennis.. my wife is obsessed and can get quite aggressive if I merely suggest watching something different on another TV channel... So I try to be patient, and put up with the never ending "shush !!!.. it's nearly finished..." 4 hours later.. "shush !!!.. it's nearly finished..."........ Regarding sporting nationalism.. Britain is so desperate for a winning tennis champion Daily Mail Readers will reluctantly accept putting up with anyone from anywhere if they can beat all the other foreigners on our behalf... I'd love to see the look on their gammon faces if tennis loving brexiteers were told Emma Raducanu has Romanian Gypsy blood in her heritage... Please god, let that be so... |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Steve Shaw Date: 11 Sep 21 - 08:51 AM Yes but it's free to air on Channel 4. A good scoop in m'humble. |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Backwoodsman Date: 11 Sep 21 - 08:48 AM Or Amazon Prime… ;-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Steve Shaw Date: 11 Sep 21 - 08:34 AM It's on Channel 4, folks! |
Subject: RE: BS: Our Emma From: Backwoodsman Date: 11 Sep 21 - 07:54 AM Hmmm…nowhere have I said she’s not entitled to call herself British. Read the thread title Dave, and think carefully about your own Straw Man! ;-) I watched her through the rounds at Wimbledon, and I was heartbroken for her when she had to retire in the semis. Heartbroken, not because she didn’t win - as a former not-especially-good-but-very-keen sportsman in several disciplines I’m well-versed in the art of losing well - but because of the manner of her exit. I can’t claim to know what was going on but, to this non-expert in psychology/physiology, it looked very much like a panic attack. Whatever, it was very sad, and it’s amazing to see how she appears to have recovered, and come out of it all the stronger for the experience. I’ll be raring to go at 9pm tonight, fired-up, and willing Emma on. And who knows, I might even allow myself the luxury of a little bit of national pride! |