The hidden hierarchy of tennis practice courts: ‘I was back in the park, smelling the weed’

A picture


The unwritten rule in professional tournaments? Do not hog the practice court.But as leading players testify – the reality is very differentOn a cool Wednesday afternoon before the US Open last year, Daniil Medvedev and Alexander Zverev were busy fine-tuning their games in an intense practice set at Louis Armstrong Stadium.Danielle Collins and Christian Harrison, semi-finalists in the mixed doubles tournament, were scheduled to take their place at the hour and the American pair duly arrived a couple of minutes before their allotted slot.An amusing scene soon unfolded.Medvedev and Zverev were clearly desperate to continue playing for a little longer, but their court time had run out.

The pair began to sheepishly deliberate over whether to attempt to play another game, even lining up on the baseline again, and they still occupied the court past the hour,Finally, they admitted defeat, allowing Collins and Harrison, who had been standing quietly on the sidelines, to begin,Although tennis players happily train with their rivals throughout the year, the practice court can also be a source of friction,Some players are particularly irritated when some of their colleagues inconsiderately extend their practice sessions past their scheduled court time,An unwritten rule in professional tournaments around the world: do not hog the practice court.

Many people shrug off poor timekeeping from their peers, but for others this is a cardinal sin.Gabriel Diallo, a talented young Canadian player ranked No 41 in the world, smiles widely: “Some people abuse their time.It’s one hour, they push it to 1.05, 1.10.

I’m Canadian so I hate confrontation.I just let people play, maybe too much.”The subject similarly prompts a chuckle from Coco Gauff: “It’s happened on tour now more so than juniors,” she says.“You definitely get some people that you know will push their time two, three, four minutes past.I’m not on the bar with that.

If I’m on the court, I’ll ask my coach the time,I don’t like to be that player that goes over their time,I’m going to stop literally maybe even a minute before, especially if they have to clean the court [on clay],”A practice court handover can be awkward on both sides,Trying to finish a session on time and on the right note is not always a pleasant feeling, as stressed by Emma Raducanu: “Seven out of 10 times you end up double faulting,” she says.

“That’s what happened to me today and I had a good practice.Maybe you feel pressure with the people coming on, especially if they’ve got a team of eight people in total.It is always a funny little interaction because the [final] point usually ends up being either terrible or unbelievable.”Court time is precious at nearly every tournament and few players are allocated as much training time as they would like.There is also a difference between the time and quality of courts available to top players and the rest.

This can lead to further resentment when higher-ranked players still take their time,Jessica Pegula, who spent much of her career outside the top 100 before a mid‑career breakthrough, notes how differently she was treated as a lower-ranked player, even at the US Open, her home tournament: “I was back in the park smelling all the weed and all the smells New York City has to offer,” she says,“They were completely different courts too,They were so fast, and they were nothing like the match courts,I’ve definitely seen a shift in my practice courts and my times and what courts I can get now that I’m a top player.

I guess you could say it’s unfair a little bit, but I also think sometimes you’ve earned that right.”Perspectives are varied on the best way to react when another player is hogging the court.Pegula believes most players are flexible and understanding, but she does not hesitate to make her presence felt when necessary: “It is kind of funny, because you walk out and stand around: ‘All right, your time’s up,’” she says.“You go up and stand there, bouncing the ball.Like, ‘OK, it’s time to get off.

’”Gauff is similarly proactive when the player before her is taking too long: “There are some people that go over [the time limit] and you’re kind of standing and you start making your way further and further on the court,” she says,“I don’t mind [players taking their time] as much, but it’s just, like, acknowledge it sometimes,If someone [says]: ‘Sorry, I have a match, I just want to hit a few more serves,’ I’m, like: ‘OK, cool,’ But the worst is if the player just keeps going like they’re not in the wrong.

And then they don’t say sorry after.And I’m like: ‘OK, noted.’”During the early rounds of the US Open, Cameron Norrie had the pleasure of waiting for Novak Djokovic and Zverev to finish their practice session.As the hour came to an end, Norrie turned to his fitness trainer: “It was like 59 [minutes past].I was trying to push my fitness trainer on to put a bit of pressure [on them].

He was like: ‘No, I don’t want to go!’”Others take a more passive stance, waiting patiently for the player before them to finish.Diallo chooses peace, but he is still judging the player for every additional second they spend on the court during his practice hour: “I think at a certain point, it’s ridiculous.If you’re finishing up your serves, OK fine.I don’t think at this stage it’s going to make a difference how you’re going to play.A smile creeps across Diallo’s face as he continues: “I just sit and watch them until when they’re going to be satisfied that: ‘OK, I’ve had enough and I can go and be calm now about my match.

’ Very Canadian.”
politicsSee all
A picture

Wes Streeting attacks centre-left for ‘excuses culture’ of blaming civil service

Wes Streeting has criticised the centre-left for an “excuses culture” that blames the UK’s slow pace of change on Whitehall officials and interest groups.As No 10 prepares to make a fresh attempt at civil service reform, the health secretary said politicians were not “simply at the mercy of forces outside of our control”.“Where there aren’t levers, we build them. Where there are barriers, we bulldoze them. Where there is poor performance, we challenge it,” he told the Institute for Government conference

A picture

China’s London super-embassy almost certain to get go-ahead next week

A vast new Chinese embassy complex in east London is almost certain to be formally approved next week despite renewed worries among Labour MPs about potential security risks and the effect on Hong Kong and Uyghur exiles in the capital.The green light for the super-embassy at Royal Mint Court near Tower Bridge would smooth relations before Keir Starmer’s visit to China, which is expected to take place at the end of January, but officials insist there has been no political input in the planning process.It would be a controversial move, with a series of Labour MPs expressing concern in the Commons on Tuesday over the plans for the complex, which spans 20,000 sq metres.Answering an urgent question from the shadow Home Office minister, Alicia Kearns, the planning minister, Matthew Pennycook, whose department is responsible for the process, said he could not comment on what was a “quasi-judicial” process.Kearns secured the question after a report in the Daily Telegraph that unredacted plans for the embassy showed a network of more than 200 subterranean rooms, one of them alongside communication cables taking information to the City of London

A picture

UK politics: Tories call for block on Chinese super-embassy amid claims of hidden chamber near sensitive cables – as it happened

Responding to Pennycook, Alicia Kearns, a shadow Home Office minister, said she was disappointed by the fact that she just got a “technocratic history lesson” from the minister.She went on:208 secret rooms and a hidden chamber just one metre from cable serving City of London and the British people. That is what the unredacted plans tell us that the Chinese Communist Party has planned for its new embassy if the government gives them the go ahead. Indeed, we now know they plan to demolish the wall between the cables and their embassy cables, in which our economy is dependent.Kearns said this would mean the Chinese could have access to “cables carrying millions of British people’s emails and financial data”, and she said this meant they would have “a launchpad for economic warfare against our nation”

A picture

Wes breaks cover to challenge Keir – without even mentioning him | John Crace

There must be a happy medium somewhere. Some ministers you can’t get to shut up, others refuse to say a word. On balance, Keir Starmer probably prefers it when they say next to nothing. On the grounds there is probably less that can go wrong. He likes it best when he is the one doing the talking as he is more in control of the message

A picture

End of western alliance means UK must be bolder, says Chatham House director

Donald Trump has ended the western alliance, requiring the UK to adopt a bolder, more independent foreign policy towards the US and China, the director of Britain’s most prestigious foreign policy thinktank has said.Delivering her analysis in her annual lecture, Bronwen Maddox, the director of Chatham House, said: “The risk of staying silent and not standing up for the principles that have underpinned the liberal international order is that those principles do indeed become an article of history and not the foundation of the world we want to live in.”She added: “The UK has performed a balancing act of some agility but to the point where it is hard to discern the policy.”Maddox described Trump’s impulsiveness, taste for military action and rejection of international law as amounting to a revolution. She said US allies “must now contemplate what was unthinkable: to defend themselves against the US, in both trade and security”

A picture

New proposed Ukip logo compared to iron cross used by Nazi regime

A proposed new Ukip logo likened to the black military cross associated with the German empire and later the Nazis is being considered by electoral authorities.A previous application by Ukip, which was once led by Nigel Farage, was rejected last November after the Electoral Commission deemed it as offensive.That application featured a black cross with a sword and a spear running through it. Ukip, which has increasingly shifted to the far right in recent years, has now submitted a new application, which appears similar but is without the sword. It includes the word Ukip, with “The New Right” underneath