John Inverdale, BBC Sports commentator, put both feet in his mouth when he started to describe the looks of Marion Bartoli, 2013 Wimbledon Women’s Singles Winner. He said – and I quote from The Guardian - “I just wonder if her … Continue reading
Add a CommentViewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Happy Super Fat Tuesday, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
Blog: Alan Dapré - Children's Author (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: daughter, Dad, teenager, wimbledon, parental support, positive parenting, fathers and daughters, alan dapre, Have Kid Will Scribble, mums net, be the best, children's homes, dad quotes, john inverdale, marion bartoli, talking to teens, things dads say, wimbledon't, Add a tag
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: sport, Reference, UK, tennis, quotations, A-Featured, Leisure, wimbledon, andy murray, oxford dictionary of quotations, serena williams, Add a tag
Wimbledon started this week, and many British eyes are on Andy Murray, who has a decent chance of being the first British Men’s Singles Winner since Fred Perry in 1936. So, no pressure then. Anyway, with the sun shining in England (for once), the strawberries in season, and the tennis on the telly, I thought I’d bring you a selection of tennis (and sport) related entries from The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations. These are from the 6th edition, but we have the lovely new seventh edition publishing in Britain in September.
“We are merely the stars’ tennis-balls, struck and bandied
Which way please them.”
John Webster, The Duchess of Malfi (1623) act 5, sc. 4
“If you can keep playing tennis when somebody is shooting a gun down the street, that’s concentration. I didn’t grow up playing at the country club.”
Serena Williams, Sunday Times (2 June 2002)
“I’d as soon write free verse as play tennis with the net down.”
Robert Frost, quoted in Interviews with Robert Frost (1966)
“When we have matched our rackets to these balls,
We will in France, by God’s grace, play a set
Shall strike his father’s crown into the hazard.”
William Shakespeare, Henry V (1599) act 1, sc. 2
“Years ago we discovered the exact point, the dead centre of middle age. It occurs when you are too young to take up golf and too old to rush up to the net.”
Franklin P. Adams, Nods and Becks (1944)
“He played the King as thought under momentary apprehension that someone else was about to play the ace.”
Eugene Field, in a review of Creston Clarke as King Lear, Denver Tribune (c.1880)
“Many a good run I have in my sleep. Many a dig in the ribs I gives Mrs J when I think they’re running into the warmint… No man is fit to be called a sportsman wot doesn’t kick his wife out of bed on haverage once in three weeks!”
R.S. Surtees, Handley Cross (1843)
“A sportsman is a man who, every now and then, simply has to get out and kill something. Not that he’s cruel. He wouldn’t hurt a fly. It’s not big enough.”
Stephen Leacock, My Remarkable Uncle (1942)
Blog: Three Men in a Tub (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Happy Super Fat Tuesday, Add a tag
It's Super Tuesday. It's Fat Tuesday. It's Super Fat Tuesday! Should've picked up a paczki or two on the way to the polling place. Maybe they should've given beads, not stickers, to those who voted.