There’s been a less-than-pleasant bed bug infestation at the humble chateau de Bisbee/Duah. It began as a minor disturbance, a hole in the screen we thought, undoubtedly allowing in some pesky mosquitos. But my negligence to nip the problem at the bud resulted in the realization of great bed bug civilizations and a few nights ago I was roundly bludgeoned into a schizophrenic mess. I’ve remained this way since, basically– sleeping on the living room floor while visions of human-sized arthropods and Hanley Ramirez batting lines dance through my head…
Anyway, I’ve gotten about three hours of sleep over the past two nights. With this being said, here are some thoughts on Wimbledon:
As I lounged on the sofa today awaiting the arrival of an unreliable exterminator, I had the good fortune of stumbling upon Wimbledon tennis on NBC. I watched parts of four matches: V. Williams vs. Safina, S. Williams vs. Dementieva, Roddick vs. Hewitt and a bit of a re-run from yesterday’s Federer/Karlovic match. I was struck by the mind-boggling contrast between the men’s and women’s game. Women’s tennis is so much more enjoyable to watch!
Williams/Dementieva was a three-set classic that, with some different wind patterns or a slightly adjusted net height, could have gone Dementieva’s way just as easily. Each player consistently hit well-placed, deep ground strokes. Granted, there was the occasional unforced error but, compared to the men, Williams and Dementieva were paragons of steadiness.
V. Williams’ match was, admittedly, not much of a classic. Venus thoroughly shellacked Safina 6-1, 6-0 using a combination of powerful forehand winners and the reliability of Safina’s timely blunders. Despite Safina’s miscues, though, and the constant lambasting by the folks in the NBC booth, I thought the match was enjoyable enough to watch. They had some good points, Safina just ended up blowing all of them.
Bringing me to my point… do I have a point?… yes… tennis is only fun to watch if the points go on for more than a fraction of a second. I was almost bored to tears watching Karlovic ace his way to a game, then Federer, then back and forth until the match was over and the entire stadium was aroused to wipe the spittle from their lips. Roddick and Hewitt had slightly better rallies but on average I would guess each point lasted no more than four shots back and forth. These are all incredible players whose serves could strip the varnish off a flagstaff but I would rather watch a Sandra Bullock romance/comedy than sit through another two hour serving clinic.