The Secret Season: Three Great Championship Events in 30 Days

 
Unless you follow the “minor sports” closely, you may not be aware that we have just passed through international sports’ greatest season: that stretch of time that runs from the middle of June until the end of July. During this short, thirty day period at the beginning of Summer, three of the world’s greatest sporting events take place: The Championships Wimbledon (best known simply as “Wimbledon”, the greatest grass court tennis tournament in the world, one of the four “Majors” in tennis (the other three are the Australian, French, and U.S. Opens) and, some would say, the great of all tennis tournaments in the world; The Open (better known in the U.S. as “The British Open”, the four day golf tournament that is one of golf’s majors –The Masters, the U.S. Open and the PGA, are golf’s three other majors–and maybe it’s most prestigious since the tournament is stage in the country where golf was invented) and the Tour De France , the world’s greatest bike race and, depending on  enforcement standards of the officials, the world’s greatest moving chemical test ground.
 
In America, this time of the year—before the major league baseball playoffs and the start of the college and pro football season—is sometimes looked on as the doldrums of sports, but a little bit of perspective would reveal that during this short period of time, three world class events in sports are contested and decided, and, even better, the coverage for all three is superb. Wimbledon is a two-week tournament and you can arguably see more matches with better viewpoints by watching it on TV, where the tournament is broadcast both during the day and at night in prime time. The British Open golf tournament is only four days long, but the coverage is always spectacular and even if the courses don’t look much like what the PGA tour typically plays on (they are links courses and require a different style of play), the traditions of that particular tournament are very, very special, and this year was even more special because the tournament was played at St. Andrews, in Scotland, which is THE HOME of golf.
 
The Tour de France is another of the great French endurance events—it ranks up there with the French Open (played on clay), which is, to some extent, endurance tennis; the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the world’s greatest sports car endurance race; and the legendary, fearsome, Vendēe Globe, which is a simple enough challenge: once around the globe, solo, non-stop, without assistance. Did I mention it was a sailing race?  Wimbledon is fourteen days of tennis on treacherous, fast, grass courts. The British Open is four days of golf on treacherous, windy, often rainy, links golf courses. The  Tour De France?  That’s 21 stages of racing over 23 days on a course that ambles through the mountains and valleys and plains of France, covering some 2200 miles. On a bike.
 
The French love for endurance and extreme endurance races is worthy of further coverage, but for today, the statement that the French do endurance racing in more different forms and competitions than anyone else will have to suffice.
 
The point of this post is simple: the part of the year that you thought might have been bereft of great sports events to watch is actually one of the very best times of the year. There’s a lot of coverage, the production quality is great, and it’s all very compelling. Like most things in life, all that is required to appreciate the season is a slight change in attitude (and channels).
 
To get you in the mood, here’s a ClickPak of resources, background, articles, and videos on Sports Greatest Season.
The Vendee Globe (source: Vendēe Globe)
Video for the 2016 race
Wimbledon   (source: Wimbledon.com)
A collection of videos on the 2015 Wimbledon Championships
Wimbledon in Print (source: NY Times)
Collection of articles from The Times on Wimbledon
The British Open
A documentary on the British Open
The British Open in Print  (Source: SBNation.com)
The Tour De France (source: The Telegraph)
Great text guide to the Tour de France
 
 
 
 
 

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