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And Wimbledon dies for me. 

What a moment for Lendl too.
And Wimbledon dies for me.![]()
It's been ten years since an American won the US Open
It's been thirty years since a Frenchman won the French Open
It's been thirty-seven years since an Aussie won the Australian Open
It's been 25 minutes since a Brit won Wimbledon
I really wanted Novak to win but this was clearly Murray's day and the definition of well deserved. I love tennis history so much and this is one of those crowning moments. Murray's put in so much time directed at this knowing full well what expectations and pressure was put in front of him. Again, what a tournament.![]()
I loathe him, his attitude and personality have been terrible from day one, but I guess we'll latch on to anyone to have a winner, even someone that only agreed to accept he's British due to his PR team. I also find it hilarious how hypocritical our media are about the Roland Garros crowd after the last few disgusting years at Wimbledon.
I haven't watched a single match of this years tournament as our coverage is a joke and with Federer and Nadal waning I have no interest.
As someone who is clearly not from England or Great Britain, can you explain the whole Andy Murray is British thing. I'm a history major in college and I always associated being British with England, not Scotland or Ireland or Wales, etc. Maybe that's just a poor thought process on my part, but I just don't understand the whole Andy Murray thing for me. It just seems similar to as if I latched onto a Canadian tennis player as an American. Maybe I'm way off base, but it's a fascinating subject to me for whatever odd reason.
England, Scotland and Wales make up Great Britain which is an island, so everyone from the 3 countries is British and individually English, Scottish and Welsh.
In football we compete as countries but in other sports we compete as Great Britain.
In Tennis we compete as Britain so Murray is British, however he obnoxiously objected to that citing he was Scottish despite where the money that got him his training in Spain came from. He later changed his mind, I guess once his PR people told him he'd need to be British to get the support and endorsements come Wimbledon.
I understand completely that Scotland, Ireland, Wales, and England make up the United Kingdom or Great Britain. I just worded it poorly. I was confused by if people tend to state that they are English, Scottish, Welsh, or Irish. Or if more often people will go by British, meaning all four of the aforementioned nations. I still feel like I'm wording this terribly, oh well.
I imagine Murray, like most Britons, probably feels slightly ambivalent about his nationality. He gets a lot of stick for comments he has made a long time ago. I think that's a bit churlish- I say everyone is allowed to grow up.
Fair enough Hunter, but I think you're being a bit harsh. If nothing else, try to be a bit pleased for the rest of the country. Besides, he may never win again.
Besides the independence brigade I find the whole English/Scottish/Welsh before British thing a bit petty. I wouldn't through a tantrum over it and some of the people that make a big fuss about are the dumbest people to inhabit this island.Northern Ireland, not the Republic of Ireland, is part of the UK.
People tend to define themselves however they feel like. Some Welsh, Scots, and English want to go their own way outside the Union. I am as English as they come, but always describe myself as British, because I am wise and broad minded.
I imagine Murray, like most Britons, probably feels slightly ambivalent about his nationality. He gets a lot of stick for comments he has made a long time ago. I think that's a bit churlish- I say everyone is allowed to grow up.
Oh come one of course Spain goes crazy when their sports players win stuff.The island hasn't won anything, one man has, I doubt Spain fapped themselves silly over Nadal's wins, but then we are so desperate for any win that that we'll accept anyone giving us it.
I understand completely that Scotland, Ireland, Wales, and England make up the United Kingdom or Great Britain. I just worded it poorly. I was confused by if people tend to state that they are English, Scottish, Welsh, or Irish. Or if more often people will go by British, meaning all four of the aforementioned nations. I still feel like I'm wording this terribly, oh well.