Friday, September 27, 2024
Saturday, September 7, 2024
The Morning: The U.S. Open concludes
Good morning. On the occasion of the U.S. Open finals, let us consider the grief of the lapsed sports fan.
Love all"It's like Black Friday at Walmart," a tennis fan told The Times of the record-breaking attendance at this year's U.S. Open. This sort of review might make a normal person glad they'd opted out of attending the tournament. But the more I heard of the colossal throngs, the endless lines attendees were enduring to procure a souvenir hat or a Honey Deuce or just to get inside the stadium complex, the more I wished I were there. I have, for most of my teen and adult life, defined myself as a tennis fan. It's been a sort of badge of honor: I may not remember the rules of football from one Super Bowl to the next, but I can recall in bright detail the intricacies of the John McEnroe-Jimmy Connors rivalry of the 1980s. Being into tennis has given me a connection to the larger fraternity of sports fans, the parking lot tailgaters and March Madness bracketeers and the people who get up at 4 a.m. to watch World Cup matches. John Jeremiah Sullivan wrote that tennis is "as close as we come to physical chess, or a kind of chess in which the mind and body are at one in attacking essentially mathematical problems. So, a good game not just for writers but for philosophers, too." For this mostly indoor cat who's more at home discussing literature than LeBron, tennis has provided a passage from the cerebral to the physical, a means of getting out of my head. In May, in a cafe in Dublin, I struck up a conversation with a woman at a neighboring table. She'd just finalized her plans to attend Wimbledon and was abuzz with anticipation for the players she hoped to see. We chatted about Coco Gauff and Carlos Alcaraz, Novak Djokovic and Frances Tiafoe, top seeds with good chances of going far. Sensing she'd found a confederate, she moved on to the Italian Open, which was going on as we spoke. As she reeled off the stats of players I'd never heard of, I felt my tennis bona fides slipping. I tried to keep up — it felt good to be connecting with a stranger in a foreign country through the lingua franca of tennis — but I was lost. I could still deconstruct every stroke in Stan Wawrinka's electric 2015 victory over Djokovic in the French Open final, but, for no good reason, I hadn't really been engaged with the game since Roger Federer and Serena Williams retired in 2022. I, who used to mark tournament dates in my calendar as soon as they were announced, had essentially retired from tennis myself. The grief of the lapsed fan is hardly a serious matter. With a little light internet research, one can get back into any sport — one could even accomplish this in the few remaining hours before the U.S. Open finals begin. My friend Justin, who texts me "!!!!" whenever something notable happens in a Grand Slam match on the (in recent years incorrect) assumption that I'm watching too, has probably not even noticed that I haven't been responding all year. I felt a little silly for even describing my U.S. Open FOMO as grief when I chatted about it this week with my colleague Sam Sifton. But he pointed out that he felt it, too, felt the poignancy of not attending the tournament, not taking part in the ritual of walking the boardwalk at Flushing Meadows from the train to the tennis center and back. I loved that part of going to the Open too, the magic-hour light radiant on the faces of fellow fans en route to a night match. If we define ourselves by who and what we love, and I think we should, then it's valuable to love as many things as we can, to accumulate enthusiasms and lean into them, to hold onto passions when we discover them and not let them fall away. This way, our identities become rich, multidimensional, expansive. Sometimes it feels like there's more to dislike than to like, more to disdain than to embrace. My longing for tennis feels like an opportunity, a reason to open my arms wider, to take more of the world in. I'm going to seize it. For more
American men's tennis has been lost in the wilderness. Before this weekend, the last American man to reach the U.S. Open final was Andy Roddick in 2006; Roddick was also the last to win the tournament, in 2003. Now, finally, the Yanks are back. Taylor Fritz beat Tiafoe in an all-American semifinal last night, winning in five sets, and on Sunday he has a shot to break the two-decade title curse. It won't be easy: He faces Jannik Sinner, the world's No. 1-ranked player. American women have had no such drought. Serena Williams reigned over the sport until recently, and Coco Gauff, one of her heirs apparent, won the Open last year. Today, another American, Jessica Pegula, is going for her first Grand Slam title. She faces Aryna Sabalenka, winner of the past two Australian Opens.
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🎨 "Long Tail Halo" (Wednesday): If you're in New York, you can see one of the fall's major art exhibits without paying admission or even walking into a museum. Outside the Met's entrance, there will be four nearly-10-foot-tall sculptures by Lee Bul, one of South Korea's most important contemporary artists. 👩🎨 "Emily in Paris" (Thursday): For reasons only discernible to Netflix, this show's fourth season was released in two batches, and the second one is on its way. Escapism at its finest? A pure, unadulterated hate-watch? Deux things can be true.
Made-in-the-Pan Chocolate CakeWhew, you made it through the first week of September. Now, you deserve a reward for navigating that passage back to work and school — preferably something soothing and easy. My vote goes to Mollie Katzen's made-in-the-pan chocolate cake, a deep cocoa stunner further enhanced with a generous handful of chocolate chips scattered on top before baking. Ready in under an hour, it's exactly the kind of instant gratification the whole family can get behind. Make it with your kids, letting them mix and stir to their little hearts' content, and serve it for midafternoon snacking over the weekend. Then, save some to tuck into lunchboxes during the week. It will make Monday so much sweeter.
Click the cover image above to read this weekend's edition of T, The Times's style magazine.
The Hunt: A family left the Nevada desert for Greater Philadelphia. Which home did they choose? Play our game. What you get for $925,000: A saltbox-style four-bedroom house in Ancram, N.Y.; a Tudor Revival cottage in Richmond, Va.; or a 2018 house in St. Louis. Andy Cohen: The TV host is selling his 3,500-square-foot apartment in the West Village, painstakingly assembled over two decades. See inside.
Men's wear: A group of experts chose the 25 most influential postwar collections. Party time: A 16-hour ferry trip between Stockholm and Helsinki is a festive summer ritual, featuring limbo contests (and maybe a bit too much to drink). Seashell art: Works encrusted with oysters and mussels are showing up in galleries and interiors.
How to de-stink thrifted clothesThe joy of scoring an amazing vintage find can quickly dissipate when you realize that it literally stinks: musty, old and dusty. Luckily, getting rid of funky smells from secondhand clothes is easier than you might think. Wirecutter's experts recommend the same formula some might use for a good spring break: the sun and a shot of vodka. The sun's UV rays can kill bacteria lingering in the fabric. And our testing has found vodka in a spray bottle works better against odor than Febreze. You'll then want to pre-treat any stains, wash the item gently and stay far away from your dryer. — Annemarie Conte
Here is today's Spelling Bee. Yesterday's pangram was fivefold. Take the news quiz to see how well you followed this week's headlines. And here are today's Mini Crossword, Wordle, Sudoku, Connections and Strands. Thanks for spending part of your weekend with The Times. — Melissa P.S. The most clicked story in the newsletter last week was a quiz to determines if you have healthy brain habits. Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at themorning@nytimes.com.
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