Bloody good shot old chap. I think I need some strawberries after that. With a double helping of cream. Hang on though: let me have a little sip of some champers first, just to wet the palate. Oh blow it- pour me a whole glass, we’ll get absolutely bloody wasted on Henman Hill, no Murray’s Mound, whatever it’s called these days.
Wimbledon gets high priority on the social calendar of the middle-classes, alongside the Royal Ascot and the Boat Race down the road in Putters. Hasn’t the weather been nice this year? Perfect for chinos and polo shirts from Ralph Lauren. But the sun finally set on the ambitions of the British in the second week, Murray defeated by the Spanish heavyweight and eventual champion Rafael Nadal in straight sets. Now, once again, we’re all murmuring: why can’t we Brits deliver any champions?
The dream of SW19 is much more accessible to those from comfortable backgrounds. When I played as a youngster, I was lucky enough to have parents who could and would support me as I attended county sessions three times a week 30 miles away. Tennis is an expensive sport. If the All England championship has wet your appetite for the game, you’ll be surprised with just how many financial obstacles there are to actually get playing on a court. The racket and balls can set you back a few tenners at least, and then you have to budget for transportation costs to get to some courts. Most local authorities do not provide tennis courts free at the point of use; at Clapham Common, it costs £5 per hour. Many people are thus excluded from having the opportunity to even pick up a racket. Now think of the enormous commitment struggling parent’s face if they want to give their children the opportunity to regularly play a game they really enjoy. Join a club, get a coach, get the proper kit; many will find this extremely expensive, some will find it completely unaffordable.
Thank goodness for Tennis for Free, a charity run by comedian Tony Hawks. It does what is says on the tin; provides tennis lessons for absolutely zilch. A team of coaches and volunteers, me included, run sessions on public tennis courts each week, giving children and adults the opportunity to have a bash at a sport that may otherwise be too expensive to do. But the charity does not have sites in every area across the country. Something more radical must be done to widen access to the sport.
Want to silence the serial moaners and increase the likelihood of a British champion at the greatest tennis tournament on the planet? Then reclaim public spaces for children in deprived areas so they can hone the skills needed to be a whiz kid on the court and play with a racket and ball without paying a penny for the space. This way you broaden the base of people playing tennis, expanding the talent pool from which a future Federer may be extracted. The children in our poorest communities, often without gardens big enough, sometimes without gardens at all, are left to some of the most dangerous urban spaces to play. Crime, knives and guns are not the stuff of Hollywood blockbusters; they are an everyday reality for these children. Over a decade, injuries as a result of gun crime have increased by 342%. The fear of traffic is endemic, with parents citing this as the main reason for why they do not let their children out to play. Those in the poorest areas are four times more likely to be killed or seriously injured in traffic accidents than their affluent peers.
Children are extremely creative. Give them some space on the street and they only need some old rackets, the ball the dog’s half-chewed and some old jumpers to make Centre-Court at Wimbledon. But too many are denied the opportunity to do this simply because of the deteriorated and dangerous public space available to them. Sensible parents of course keep their children indoors, unintentionally depriving them of the opportunity to play. For the sake of social justice and for the sake of widening the talent pool of potential tennis champions, we must therefore create child-friendly communities. That means more visible policing; that’s police who patrol our streets instead of being strangled by needless paperwork. And, more radically, it means a new national speed limit of 20mph on all side residential roads, which would not only reduce the number of children killed in road accidents by an estimated 70%, but also increase parental confidence in public spaces so their children can get outside and play.
Let’s remember that tennis isn’t just played on the grass courts of the All England Club. The urban spaces across cities also have the potential to be the domain of future British champions.
The Guardian
- Best days of your life?
- Conservative modernisation: it's time for version 2.0
- For Tories, STV is the answer
- Home truths on the boomerang boys
- It's time for a kinder Conservatism
- Loneliness should be recognised as a signal of poverty in today's Britain
- Maternity pay just isn't fair
- New grub street
- The 'big society' must be more than a professional feelgood exercise
- The other half of social mobility
- The real cost of no-fees degrees
- We must cut speed limits
- We need more women
Daily Mail
- Alcohol price hikes won't stop binge drinkers
- Attenborough is the BBC at its best and must be saved from cuts
- Cyclists are universally loathed
- Don't let X Factor fool you
- Freedom on the slopes comes at a price
- Here's how the liberal elite can help the poor climb the social ladder
- Home is the only place Labour's boomerang kids can go
- I fear trouble when iPOD generation hits the job market this summer
- Imaginative early years will improve our children's education
- More students don't always mean more social mobility
- Social mobility starts when you get out and vote
- The harsh reality for twentysomethings
- Time to own up - I'm just not a fan of the festive season
- Young people should start treating us geeks with the respect we deserve
The Independent
- Cameron should ignore the calls for an early election: the Tories need the liberals
- David Cameron's oppressive Big Society
- Don't let the Government scrap Sure Start
- Of course the Conservatives should be the party for workers. But they must also be the party for those out of work
- Stop all this exaggeration
- Tear down the social ghettos
- The Tories should drop their obsession with small government
- The immigration issue is overshadowing the spirit of optimism which once defined Cameron's Conservatism
- The politics of love
- The right type of Big Society
- This Tory love affair with marriage must stop
- Why I, a Conservative, say Yes to AV
- Why we’re all a little liberal and a little conservative
- Yearning for the great outdoors
New Statesman
- A third source to boost living standards: the family
- Conservatism will wither without modernisation
- Ending school segregation is the key to social mobility
- Goldman Sachs gets into social impact bonds - but what are they?
- In defence of Cameron's conservatism
- Legalising same-sex marriages is conservative, not liberal
- Liberals are well served by the Conservative Party
- Osborne must be bold to show the Tories are not "the party of the rich"
- Osborne's attack on flexible working will harm family life
- The next stage of Tory modernisation must address the party's class problem
- Why we need a Lib Dem-Tory alliance
The Daily Telegraph
Yorkshire Post
- A generation that's running too fast and getting nowhere
- Booming industries should create opportunities for all
- Childcare help could rescue the Prime Minister
- Early years education must be affordable for everyone
- Fees put universities to the test over value for money
- If degrees don't pay off, why charge more?
- Let’s talk about love to put passion in politics
- No country for young people
- Our universities must learn a valuable lesson in student economics
- Sandwich generation spread themselves thin
- Student fee protesters are opposing opportunities for all
- The X Factor dream and the hard graft of real success
- We must fight this devastating blow to families
- We must give education the power to change more lives
- We need a degree of reality about university
- Why living an 'extended youth' makes grown up sense
- Why our children should learn to love the outdoor life
- Why the Lib Dems hold the key to future Tory success
- You don't have to be nice to be part of the big society
Prospect Magazine
Standpoint.
Total Politics
Public Finance
Conservative Home
The Huffington Post
The Progressive Conscience
LSE politics and policy
Public Servant
Market Square
- Childcare: the good, the bad, the uncertain
- What do 5A*-Cs tell us about school performance?
- Time for some fresh thinking on childcare
- Universities in demand?
- Easing the cost of childcare
- A passport to the mainstream
- Getting bang for students' buck
- The university access question: be careful what you wish for
- The forgotten bank of mum and dad
Public Sector Executive
Nursery World
New Culture Forum
Blog Archive
Tuesday, 8 July 2008
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