Sad news ever:BJORN BORG head coach sack due to read more…

My Wimbledon highlight came on Saturday evening when rain stopped play. The BBC showed a wonderful film on the rise and rise of Bjorn Borg. He never fell, he simply did a Garbo. Five Wimbledon triumphs in succession, one lost final and then he wanted to be alone. He no longer had the hunger and without the hunger there was nothing.

I watched the whole thing with a lump in my throat – for Borg; for the bleached-out colour of the 1970s; for the tiny rackets and tight shorts; for his headband; for his T-shirts that looked like Pacer mints. For the epic matches with Jimmy Connors and John McEnroe and Vitas Gerulaitis. And, most of all, for my childhood.Later I was reminded that Pete Sampras won two more Wimbledon titles than Borg and won 14 majors in total – four more than Federer, three more than Borg and two more than Roy Emerson; that, theoretically, he is the best there has been.

That lollop-tongued, bish-bash bore the greatest of all time? Give me a break.

I loved Borg – he turned me on to the game. I despised Sampras – he turned me away. I stopped watching when Pistol Pete bullied his opponents into rally-free submission. Man as machine: it was horrible to watch in every sense.The strange thing is that the Ice Borg was also called a machine. His detractors, and some of his admirers, said he had no pulse (it was actually recorded at 35bpm), no fear, no heart. How wrong they were.

 

 

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*