TREAT YOURSELF TO A SLICE OF THE ROOM'S FRESH FACT PIE

Tender morsels of truth beneath a buttery crust of guesswork.
This week: Wimbledon

The first Wimbledon tennis tournament was held at the Hurlingham Polo and Croquet club in May 1802. Only (male) members of the landed gentry were permitted to play. The club's by-laws obliged them to wear frock-coats and top-hats. Women were not permitted even to watch, as gentlemen "straining, stretching and possibly perspiring" was deemed a spectacle too vulgar to witness.
The strawberry is the fruit most strongly associated with Wimbledon. It now grows in Britain during summer; this is because when Richard the Lionheart's men returned from the crusades, their innards were full of the indigestible seeds of strawberries eaten in warmer climes. When the crusaders died, the seeds germinated, which is why the first strawberries to grow here grew in cemeteries. (Until the mid-19th century strawberries were still widely called 'deadberries'; the redder and more heart-shaped the fruit, it was said, the stronger and braver the man from whom it had sprouted.)
Despite its lavish corporate hospitality, exorbitant refreshments, its royal box and tout-inflated prices, the entire Wimbledon complex boasts a mere twelve ladies and gents toilets. That's cubicles, not buildings. The half-empty stands seen on TV during evening play are not due to spectators having left for the day (as commentators would have you believe), but are explained by the vast toilet-queues snaking round the complex as a day's intake finally catches up with fans. Those believing it possible to abstain from fluids and beat the need to pee are usually among the first to suffer from heat exhaustion (3,763 in the fortnight last year).
Wimbledon's grass courts encourage a brutish power-play dependent on almost annual advances in racket-technology. Rackets used to be strung with a fibre known as 'cat gut'. In nearly all instances, of course, this twine had not begun life in an animal's intestines. But in 1978, a heavily-fortified farm outside Wisbech was raided, and 212 cats were taken away by police and the RSPCA. Farmer Paul Whittle had been rearing special Burmese/Siamese hybrids, slaughtering them for their offal and selling the highly-resilient fibrous by-products to middlemen acting on behalf of racquet giants Slazenger and Wilson. Among the players to have their equipment seized in the hushed-up operation were Ilie Nastase, Jimmy Connors and Holland's Tom Okker. None knew where their racquet 'strings came from, though Poker publicly blamed that year's 4th round defeat on distractions caused by his racquet making 'strange and discomforting yowling noises' when returning service. Whittle was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment.