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Tuesday, June 06, 2006
Pages: Red clay meets red clay in Paris By John Pages Matchpoint
Golfers dream of smelling the grass and catching a Tiger lurking behind the woods at Augusta National, home of The Masters.
Hoop fans envy fellow columnist Homer Sayson, who owns NBA Finals reserved seats in Miami and Dallas. The feet of football fans get ticklish with the words “Germany World Cup,” which kicks off this Friday.
We all have dreams.
I own one. No, four. To watch all the tennis grand slams: Wimbledon, the Australian Open, Roland Garros and the US Open.
US Open? That dream became reality seven years ago when I spent four straight weeks with my dad Bunny in New York.
Seeing Andre Agassi and Serena Williams hold aloft those trophies sent shivers up my spine. I had to pinch myself and slap my face left and right to ensure I was awake.
Wimbledon? The Australian Open?
Dreams, yes.
Roland Garros?
One day five years ago, my father-in-law Jack Mendez gathered the family and announced: “We’re going to Europe!” Three months later, we’re aboard Galaxy, the Princess Cruises ship that’s seven stories tall complete with theaters, a casino, restaurants, and Broadway musicals. By boat, we hopped from city to city. The place I loved the most? Paris.
Imagine the Eiffel Tower, Nortre Dame, Arc de Triomphe, Louvre Museum, Versailles Palace. Touring those sites, it felt like watching a movie. Only this time, the screen was live, right before your eyes. The place in I loved the most?
Roland Garros.
It’s the site of the ongoing French Open. If you’ve clicked on Channel 34 on SkyCable at night, that’s it.
We arrived late in the afternoon. As our van stopped at the entrance, I gripped my fingers, smiled and screamed, “This is it!”
To our surprise, no guards manned the gate. We entered. Our first stop was to the right as we walked inside a side court.
There it was, before our bare eyes, the red clay, or le terre battue, as the French call it. I stepped on it, bent down and felt the dirt rub against my fingers.
Almost like our courts here in Cebu, only thicker and red.
We moved to the open air pavilion. This is the area, I imagined, where spectators relaxed, dined and chatted between matches. We mimicked the statues of the Four Musketeers, some of the best French netters in history: Jean Borotra, Jacques Brugnon, Henri Cochet, and the clothing wear founder, René Lacoste.
Finally, we entered the main stadium, Court Philippe Chatrier (named after the former head of the French Tennis Federation).
We absorbed every detail and gazed around. Compared to the US Open’s Arthur Ashe Center Court, this is intimate, I told my wife Jasmin. With us were my daughter Jana, Jasmin’s sisters Michelle and Monette, and brother Jake. It was just us inside, the court laid bare all to ourselves.
We snapped photos, took videos and lingered wondering how it must feel when the court is jam-packed and inhabited by warriors with rackets. All of a sudden, as we marveled around and chatted, my daughter blurted out, “I want to make poo-poo!”
Poo-poo? My two-year-old Jana? At the center court? Was this possible? Will we be caught? Jailed?
As parents all know: When a child has to go, she has to go. And so Jana, with her diapers on and standing on Court Philippe Chatrier, dropped a bombshell that rocked Paris.
Poooot! Poooot! Poooot!
We shook our heads. Laughed. Who would have believed such a sight. That was our family’s Ripley’s Believe It Or Not episode.
On center court, dozens have been crowned champions, knelt down and wiped tears after victory –the Bjorn Borgs, the Michael Changs, and, this Sunday, Rafael Nadal – but how many can claim they dropped red clay on the red clay of the French Open?
(john@brightacademy.edu.ph)
For Bisaya stories from Cebu. Click here. (June 6, 2006 issue) Write letter to the editor.Click here. Join the Sun.Star message board.Click here. |
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