Weekend heroics in Paris, amid urbanisme and the latest
in French political turmoil.
The Palais Omnisport de Bercy, which roughly translates as the
all-purpose sports dome near the Bastille because nobody outside
Paris knows where Bercy is and neither do most Parisians, is one of
these newfangled architectural-cum-urban development jobs that the
conservative administrations that ran the city for four decades
sponsored with mixed motives and mixed results. Most sensible
observers feel that when you look at urban development in other big
old famous historic cities with gems of architecture, quaint
neighborhoods, and precious little room to build, Paris should be
given a passing grade. Under the impetus of Charles de Gaulle's
Culture minister André Malraux, and when the mayoralty was restored
under the Chirac-Tiberi administrations, building and rebuilding
projects eradicated whole neighborhoods, put up some huge new
structures that in effect changed the character of others.
Particularly in the 1980s and '90s there were serious
charges of chronic corruption in the way projects were chosen and
carried out, as well as persistent reports of individual abuses by
the mayors' men. Less forgivable, the sociological dislocations
their programs caused never seem to have been a serious concern.
However, I am no sociologist and it is not clear to me which came
first, the dislocations or the urban development, what the French
call urbanisme. Some of the best writers on Paris, such as
the historian Louis Chevalier, think the urban policies themselves
had much to do with the destruction of the city's essential
character, which is likely to cost in the long run.
This sober reflection having been made, the domed stadium
at Bercy, some blocks east of the Treasury ministry complex --
itself a slightly later consequence of these grand rebuilding
projects and a source of resentment to high-ranking Treasury
officials who used to have magnificent digs in the Louvre -- has to
be adjudged a success so far, at least superficially. Since the
mid-1980s, it has played a role, if such comparisons can be made,
akin to New York's Madison Square Garden or Washington's Metro
Center. Personally, I distrust all these hustle-the-taxpayer
gimmicks of municipal governments. There are plans to revive the
perfectly nice old RFK Stadium here on Washington's east side,
abandoned in favor of an admittedly well-designed white elephant
(forgive the contradiction) across the river, which suggests the
whole expensive move to Anacostia was just a waste of money (do the
Nats ever fill it? will they ever?)
But what do I know? The east side of Paris, like the east
side of most old cities, needed a boost because the tendency of
almost all cities is westward. It probably has to do with real
estate prices favoring the sunset. At any rate, and leaving for
another day memories of the neighborhoods it replaced and the
people who inhabited them, Bercy has blended in pretty well, as has
the Opera-Bastille, notwithstanding some collateral damage the most
significant of which, for us Americans, was the fiasco of trying to
move the legendary American Center there from its historic location
on the boulevard Raspail, thanks to some dizzy New York dames who
thought they would do good while doing well for themselves and
instead walked away carelessly, the Center dead. That is another
one to look into, perhaps a subplot to my planned
Paris-urban-development story.
Sports were on my mind, however, and putting aside
misgivings about city government by bread-and-circuses, you had to
hand it to the competitors who showed up for last week's Bercy
tennis tournament, the season's last Masters-1000 event, whatever
that means. Magnificent play by two Frenchmen, Gael Monfils and
Michael Llorda, almost gave the partisan home crowd an all-French
final; in the end everyone agreed great matches were played by all
through the semis, in which Monfils beat Roger Federer in three
tie-breakers and Llorda fell by nearly the same scores to the Swede
powerhouse Robin Soderling, who then made mincemeat of the last
standing Frenchman in the final, 6-0, 7-6 (1). Monfils won deserved
applause for his breath-taking series of come-from-behind's, saving
seven match points against Fernando Verdasco in the third round and
five in the semi against Federer, who appeared his old dominant
self yet was unable to close when he had the chances. For what it
is worth, the advocates of Bercy's fast surfaces, notably the
serve-and-volley enthusiasts Andy Murray and Andy Roddick, flopped,
while the Swedish and French baseline and crosscourt men went the
distance.
Monfils was especially strong with a passing forehand that
repeatedly got away from Federer, but he also played a match full
of heart, chasing down shots that the tactically more adroit
Federer sent all across the court. His serve was a surprise: either
I have not been paying attention -- overly concerned with municipal
corruption? -- or he has improved it this season, because Federer
literally did not see some of his aces.
Llorda, known as a doubles specialist, showed tremendous
heart as well, getting three match points against Soderling in
their semi, after a mighty run. The Swede, however, stayed calm
under pressure and counted on a fantastic cross court backhand
that, in this tournament at least, dominated every opponent. In the
final he matched Monfils ace for ace and added pin-point volley
play that showed he was in far better control of both muscles and
nerves than his opponent.
Actually, everyone agreed, in a spirit of
good-sportsmanship in happy contrast to the kind of rancor that
France has been experiencing lately due to the president's modest
proposal that maybe sometimes people ought to work for a living,
that a Federer-Llorda final was as likely as the Soderling-Monfils
one that was. But tennis is the mental sport par
excellence. With no teammates (or only one in doubles) to
worry about, you are either in the game or not, and Soderling, who
lost in the French Open at Roland-Garros this year and last (to
Nadal in the final and to Federer in the semis, respectively), this
time determined to stay Swedish, in the Borg-Wilander-Enqvist
tradition. Cool as ice and resistant to panic, Swedes are also
known to be gloomy, suicidal even. This trait, whose relation to
the kingdom's peculiar political-social environment has been the
subject of some fine literature by Per Wahloo and Maj Sjowall in
the 1960s and 1970s and Nenning Mankell more recently, is, so to
speak, deadly in a game where every shot counts. Soderling, anyway,
was as lively and, barring a few double faults, as accurate as can
be. However, the French racer Jean-Baptiste Grange beat the Swede
Andre Mykrer last week in the slalom at Levi, Finland; his lead was
33 hundredths of a second.
The perennial French question in tennis is whether their
champions can "fill the unforgiving minute/with sixty seconds'
worth of distance run," but they are scarcely alone. During the
weekend heroics at Bercy, the French government tendered its
resignation to President Nicolas Sarkozy. He named a new team
(under the same p.m., François Fillon). He has a year and a half to
do what it takes to keep himself and his party in power.
Indications are that he is opting for a fighting government, more
right than center-right, to force a clear choice upon a population
shaken by threats to its physical and emotional security. Will he
go the distance? Or go down just before the finish line, like the
well-beloved one they call la Monf? C'est toute la
question.
In tennis, the French will try to win the Davis Cup next
month, skipping the wear and tear of the Association of Tennis
Professionals (ATP) tournament at London in a couple of weeks, for
which none of them qualified. It is not clear what good the sport
derives from these incomprehensible tournaments, wherein the London
show, the year's last on the ATP World Tour, is limited to eight
players who qualified under a points system no one understands.
Obviously, winning helps, and winning the more prestigious
tournaments helps more; you get two thousand points for winning one
of the historic tournaments (such as Roland-Garros) and one
thousand for a Masters 1000 (such as Bercy), with points
accumulating over a 52-week calendar.
Billed as "the final showdown," the London Barclays
tournament (bankers like tennis, the Bercy tournament is sponsored
by Paribas) is really no such thing. True, if Rafa Nadal and Roger
Federer, who have the most points, reach the final, perhaps they
will settle the speculation over which one should be world number
one, after not meeting in tournaments since last June at Madrid.
However, if any of the other contenders -- Novak Djokovic, Andy
Murray, Robin Soderling, Tomas Berdych, David Ferrer, and Andy
Roddick -- bumps either or both, what will it prove? It will prove
that tennis is mental, I suppose, which is a real brain
twister.
I am no impresario or pro-sports promoter, and I guess the
logic of commerce escapes me. But it is not even clear why tennis
should have a "champion" the way, for example, baseball does. In
baseball, whoever wins, wins. If you win the most games, you get
the pennant. Then if you win the most games in the inter-league
series, you are the world champion. Tennis is different. You win a
championship, you are that championship's champion for a year. That
is the kind of game it is. It is part of this sport's
meaning.
Well, the world does not care much for meaning these days.
Actually, you can win the pennant without winning the most games in
your league, due to a perversion introduced some years ago and
known as the "wild card." Baseball, a game of statistics, the sport
of the long season, does not even connect, phonetically, to such a
term. In tennis, you can win the number one ranking on points, at
least in theory, without winning any of the four best-known
tournaments.
The Davis Cup -- the ladies have their Fed Cup, easily won
this year by Italy over a spirited but inexperienced U.S. team --
once had a certain world championship aura about it in the sense
that it at least suggested which nations were cultivating the sport
most assiduously, producing fresh and enduring talent. However,
this year the Cup's final round will take place in Belgrade,
Serbia, first week of December. Since neither Monfils nor Llorda
qualified for the ATP "showdown" in London, whereas Djokovic did,
maybe that means something. Especially since Spain won the Cup last
year.
The palais is not far from the Gare de Lyon. We were in the
neighborhood to pick up our daughter last summer. Horrid
neighborhood to drive in - which is the idea, of course.
Note the omnisports in the title - the place has no soul.
Convenient because of the TGV for sport and concert lovers
alike.
Next time you're in the neighborhood, hit the Bibliothèque
Nationale de France. It's on the other side of the Seine. More
interesting architecturally, although the book shapes might be
considered a tad literal.
When we (meaning my French-born husband and his family in France)
hear Bercy we think of concerts, not sports. Various nephews and
nieces have gone to concerts at Bercy but no sporting event.
They intended to revitalize the neighborhood and save youth in the
bargain. They probably envisioned creating thousands of little
Yannick Noahs.
Isn't this part of the problem, Chris? The courts -- and even
military tribunals -- are REFUSING evidence gotten by "enhanced
interrogation" on the grounds that it the poisonous fruit of
torture.led
tube
Barbara| 11.16.10 @ 4:55PM
The palais is not far from the Gare de Lyon. We were in the neighborhood to pick up our daughter last summer. Horrid neighborhood to drive in - which is the idea, of course.
Note the omnisports in the title - the place has no soul. Convenient because of the TGV for sport and concert lovers alike.
Next time you're in the neighborhood, hit the Bibliothèque Nationale de France. It's on the other side of the Seine. More interesting architecturally, although the book shapes might be considered a tad literal.
When we (meaning my French-born husband and his family in France) hear Bercy we think of concerts, not sports. Various nephews and nieces have gone to concerts at Bercy but no sporting event.
They intended to revitalize the neighborhood and save youth in the bargain. They probably envisioned creating thousands of little Yannick Noahs.
Americaine in Paris | 11.16.10 @ 7:14PM
Gene Kelly we miss you.
zhuanji| 11.16.10 @ 8:19PM
we miss you,gene kelly
WAKE UP| 11.16.10 @ 9:42PM
Nice try at using tennis (or, rather, using the French players) as a metaphor for French politics - but I'd rather you didn't!
Autoclave| 11.26.10 @ 12:49AM
Isn't this part of the problem, Chris? The courts -- and even military tribunals -- are REFUSING evidence gotten by "enhanced interrogation" on the grounds that it the poisonous fruit of torture.led tube
weddingdress| 7.5.11 @ 4:47AM
Nice try at using tennis (or, rather, using the French players) as a metaphor for French politics - but I'd rather you didn't!