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Murray and the British sporting psyche| Murray and the British sporting psyche |
Watching the US Open Tennis final early last week - I was amazed by the commentary at the end of the game (in which the Scot Andrew Murray was beaten in straight sets) essentially claiming a British Victory that he had come so far and done Great Britain proud to get into the final - good old British fair play and all that. Excuse me, but is this the same country that last month was declaring only Gold was good enough for Team GB at the Beijing Olympics?! Have the British lost their sense of ‘fair play' or does it only apply when they are losing? To begin, I must admit my bias as an Australian who secretly gloats at most British sporting losses. But for a country that seems almost proud of a concept they call ‘Wimbledonisation' (they host the greatest players in the world but their citizens are never amongst the winners) you can only admire the way they accept sporting defeats with such grace (or resignation). Perhaps it is because they are not in fact a single team at all. In some competitions (like the Olympics) they compete as Great Britain and yet in others the English battle the Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish on the Rugby fields, football pitches and Cricket greens. England may have failed to qualify for last years World Cup but in Edinburgh and Cardiff there was not so much pity as a feeling of ‘now you know what it feels like to miss out also!' In the Commonwealth Games, Six Nations and many other international competitions it is England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales all competing individually - hardly conducive to forging a nationalistic sporting fervour when all these groups collide to produce a united British team. ‘Fair Play' may be all well and good in the schoolyard but don't let that cloud your impression. The British are a proud sporting nation no matter whether playing under their separate or united flags and with the 2012 Olympics coming to London will only become more so in the next few years.
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| Last Updated ( Thursday, 18 September 2008 ) |