没穿内裤那事儿……
Dott's dash makes him the people's champion
During the unluckiest week of his life, Graeme Dott traveled around the world to play a snooker match. Which he lost. Along with his underpants
Dan Rookwood
Wednesday January 8, 2003
Guardian Unlimited
Lion or tiger, lion or tiger, lion or tiger...
"Is this some kind of wind-up?" said snooker player Graeme Dott on hearing he'd been voted by you as Guardian Unlimited's Alternative Sports Personality of 2002. "I've never heard of this award."
As acceptance speeches go, it was almost as comic as the story which 31% of respondents decided was worthy of winning Dott this year's title.
In February last year, Dott, currently the world No12, was fined two frames in his first-round match against Welshman Darren Morgan at the China Open in Shanghai for over-sleeping and arriving late, despite having set two alarm clocks. After eventually losing the match 5-3, Dott said he felt "suicidal".
This might sound like something of an overreaction. It also hardly seems like a good enough reason for Dott to beat the Kenyan cyclists who went on a training run down the M61 into second place, and H'Angus the Monkey, the Hartlepool FC mascot who successfully stood for mayor, into third. But it was the remarkably unlucky sequence of events that Dott suffered which caught your imagination (and made John Cleese's comedy caper Clockwise look ordinary by comparison).
Dott's astounding China crisis began when a blizzard delayed his flight from Glasgow to Heathrow. He then missed his London-to -Bangkok flight by a mere 10 minutes and had to wait 10 hours for the next one.
"I wasn't even guaranteed a seat," he said. "Me and my mate who was with me just had to sit around and wait. We played on the fruit machines and I bought a golf magazine to kill time."
When they arrived in Thailand, there was a further 10-hour wait for the connection to Shanghai.
"I was really worried I wouldn't make it at all for the tournament," he said. "Lots of the players like traveling to these places, but I hate it. I spent all my money phoning home to my dad trying to see if I'd arrive in time."
After a tortuous 43-hour journey, Dott and friend finally arrived at the hotel in Shanghai at 8am despite having been scheduled to get there at 1pm the previous day. But at least he still had plenty of time before his match at 2.30pm the following day.
So tired was he that he fell fast asleep upon arrival. "We didn't come to till 10pm," said Dott. "But of course, after 12 hours' kip we couldn't sleep anymore. So we were up all night again. We stayed up till breakfast and after that we felt tired once more so we set two alarms and went back to sleep so that I'd feel a bit fresher for the match that afternoon."
The alarms went off, the phone rang off its hook, hotel staff rang the bell on the door, but nothing could rouse the Scot.
"I remember waking eventually in a blur and seeing that it said 14:15 on the alarm-clock. For a while I just lay there disorientated, wondering what was going on. And then I heard the doorbell. It was so loud. And then I panicked."