The Times at Wimbledon tells the story of the Championships at the All-England Club in the words of the finest sportswriters of their day. From the uncredited 'Lawn Tennis Correspondent' of the earliest reports and Rex Bellamy in the 1960s to Lynne Truss and Simon Barnes in the 21st Century, Times and Sunday Times reporters share with the reader the view from the best seats in the house - the press benches on Centre Court. They watched as Fred Perry took three men's singles titles in a row between 1934-36, as Althea Gibson became the first black champion in 1957, as Martina Navratilova and Pete Sampras took the sport to new heights, and as Andy Murray won Olympic gold and the men's title within a year. They chronicled the development of tennis from long trousers to designer sportswear, from wooden racquets to titanium and from genteel amateurism to the extreme professionalism of the Open Era. They saw Suzanne Lenglen and Serena Williams, Bunny Austin and Bjorn Borg, Rene Lacoste and Roger Federer - and all on the manicured grass of London SW19 and against the backdrop of those ivy-clad walls. Miss a chance to read the finest tennis writing from the world's favourite tournament? You cannot be serious!
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Maße
Höhe: 222 mm
Breite: 144 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-78531-517-6 (9781785315176)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Nick Szczepanik was a Times staff sports writer for a decade and is now a freelance journalist whose byline has appeared in every national daily and Sunday newspaper. He was a member of the Times' reporting team at Wimbledon for a number of years but modesty forbids him from including any of his own contributions here.. He is also the author of Brighton Up, the inside story of Brighton & Hove Albion's promotion to the Premier League, and Pulp Football, an anthology of true football stories you simply couldn't make up.