Ultimate Sports Trips: Wimbledon

Ultimate Sports Trips: Wimbledon

More than a tennis tournament, Wimbledon offers a journey into one of sport's last great traditions.

Lucie Turner
Published on

I remember my first trip to Wimbledon. 

Admittedly, it was around 40 years ago, but I got the bug and went every year for the next 20 or so. It was a school trip in the UK: jumping on a coach, rolling into London, then queuing for a hell of a long time even though we already had tickets. 

I watched Jimmy Connors and John McEnroe, and somehow managed to wangle tickets for another match happening on Centre Court. 

It felt like living the dream. Iconic. Huge. Awe-inspiring. 

That first taste of SW19 set a standard that almost no other sporting event has ever matched.

A guidepost at Wimbledon

Let the theatrics begin

The glaring sun during June and July will make it feel less like a sporting event and more like you are attending a summer garden party. There are champagne corks poppin' under a shady umbrella, and hints of strawberries and cream are floating in the air, mixed with a whiff of Pimm's. Once this has all been witnessed, the mood will change, as the buzz in the crowd dies down in anticipation of the first serve.

On Centre Court, there is such silence before a serve that it becomes an exhilarating sound within sport itself. A duchess or an on-screen star in the Royal Box looks down at the court with all her concentration; it is about more than just a game of tennis.

A blend of high-level athletes, the British summer, an old-world atmosphere, and world-famous celebrities, Wimbledon is a collision of worlds that brings these elements together. In the increasingly noisy and flashy world of sports, Wimbledon remains powerful because it feels so timeless.

Why Wimbledon feels different from every other sporting event

The defining characteristic of Wimbledon, compared to the other Grand Slam tennis tournaments, is its unwavering commitment to tradition and restraint. While the US Open is very much like a rock concert (it's truly a show), the Australian Open could be described as a boisterous carnival, and Wimbledon is a very subdued theatre. 

There is no cheering of faults. 

There is absolute respect for silence. 

You give an opposing player your applause, and the traditional dress code is still prevalent (for the most part). 

There’s even a 5-page code of conduct for “The Queue.”

Members of the royal family enjoying Wimbledon

The fantasy - London summer, prestige, and tennis tradition

Wimbledon is the epitome of aspiration; it resonates just as much in reality as on the screen. 

From quaint village streets through the champagne terraces and finally to the serene stillness of Centre Court, entering the classic grass setting at Wimbledon is to enter a space where the likes of Borg, Navratilova, and Federer once reigned. 

Along with the 74 reserved seats of the Royal Box (where you might even catch glimpses of royalty or Hollywood stars like Benedict Cumberbatch and Tom Cruise), it has created a world that has achieved legendary status. 

And yes, you're welcome to act as you fit right in!

The reality - tickets, queues, crowds, and British weather

Of course, the fairytale needs an infusion of pure grit. Tickets are themselves a battle; the public ballot is a matter of sheer luck, and resale Debentures for centre court can start at $5,000, with a ticket at the end potentially costing $16,000.

Then there's 'The Queue', the quintessential national sport of the UK, and an endurance event in its own right!

Did you know that in 2025, over 10,000 people queued for a same-day ticket, some camping for up to 48 hours? 

In addition, the usual British rain, 42,000 spectators, and countless queues for strawberries and cream, Pimm's, and toilets, will all add to the whole experience. 

Although both the Centre and No.1 courts are covered, what takes place beneath the glamour is total chaos, and you’ll either love it or hate it.

Is Wimbledon actually the best tennis experience?

Ask any ten tennis fans, and you will hear ten different stories. 

The US Open has its electrified nights, the French Open has its rough clay courts, and the Australian Open has its party feel, but Wimbledon is a far more personal experience. 

You're mere yards from aspiring greats; you can hear the satisfying thwack of ball on strings, and you experience the tense silence in the air just before the ball is served. 

Every point is applauded, win or lose, by both sides, and due to the history the tournament shares with women's tennis, from Billie Jean King to Serena Williams, even a third-round fixture has weight. Wimbledon makes ordinary tennis feel historic.

Why Wimbledon endures as a bucket list sports trip

The enduring nature of Wimbledon lies in what it sells. It's about tradition, it's about access to sporting history, which seems so rare in modern sports. The great sports trips, the best ones, aren't just about the actual action. They're about the atmosphere and the moment. 

And Wimbledon offers that and more; it sells an entire world you'd quite like to inhabit for a couple of weeks. It sells a world in which players still bow to the Queen (actually only until 2003, but the ghostly ritual lingers on). 

A world where you might queue for several hours for the very chance of entry. 

A world where your biggest decisions are whether or not to order a Pimm's, or whether to head off to see if Djokovic, with his familiar game, can make yet another ace. 

Wimbledon isn't just a sporting event people go to; it's a sporting world they want to be part of.

Game, set, and match

Yes, Wimbledon might be more genteel and perhaps less rowdy than any other major sports event on the planet, and will always exist without any fireworks or bare-chested fans in body paint spelling out teams' names. It is one of sport's truly special sights. 

It turns, for two weeks in June and July, tennis into something much more than merely a sport: half festival, half travel fantasy, half living history. 

I remember it from the first school trip I ever took, watching Connors rage at a line judge, McEnroe swear at a cloud - it truly felt like stumbling into a cathedral for grass and genius. 

For decades, the strawberries still taste the same. 

The silence before a big serve still makes the hair stand up on the back of your neck. 

And the queue? Still ludicrously long, and that's part of the appeal. 

Wimbledon has a reward for the patient, a magic for the receptive, a power for spoiling all other sports from then on. That's why it remains the ultimate 'must-do' sports trip. 

Go at least once. Take sunscreen. And for heaven's sake, do not wear neon.

Lucie Turner

Lucie Turner
Writer

Lucie brings almost 20 years of iGaming experience, combining sports writing expertise with deep casino knowledge. Her work spans live sports coverage, slot mechanics, player-focused reviews, and strategic casino content. Known for her no-nonsense, first-hand approach, Lucie cuts through jargon to deliver clear, practical insights for both operators and players.

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