logo
Wimbledon's strawberry champion faces rivals for its crown

Wimbledon's strawberry champion faces rivals for its crown

CNA30-06-2025
LONDON :It may be the top seed at Wimbledon but even the reigning king of strawberries knows the crown sits lightly.
The Malling Centenary berry has reigned supreme since being introduced at The Championships in 2016, sweetening summer rituals and picnics alike at the All England Club.
Yet in the fields and labs, a new crop of challengers is ripening. In the high-stakes world of soft fruit supremacy, flavour, firmness and fame are all up for grabs.
The Malling Centenary variety is known for its sweetness, 'heart-shaped' size, and quality of taste, according to Joe Furber, Food and Drinks Operations Manager at Wimbledon.
Weeks of sunshine and a "bumper crop" in the UK have helped produce an excess of strawberries, meaning Furber expects around 2.5 million of them, or 5,000 tonnes, alongside 13,000 litres of cream to be consumed during the Wimbledon fortnight.
This year, a portion of 10 Malling Centenary strawberries with cream costs two pounds and seventy pence ($3.70) after the first price increase (20 pence) since 2010.
The strawberries are grown in polytunnels by Hugh Lowe Farms, a family-owned business in Kent, just 31 miles from the All England Club, picked and delivered each morning at 8:30am.
'Their best time aligns perfectly with the championships, which is quite fortuitous, which is a big part of why they were chosen,' Furber said.
But like every champion, it cannot afford to rest on its laurels as contenders lurk to seize the strawberry crown.
The Summer Berry Company, based at Groves Farm near Chichester, told Reuters the variety landscape is becoming increasingly competitive and that it has reduced its production of Malling Centenary over the years.
'I love Malling Centenary, I'm in no way saying it's a bad variety. I'm just saying that there's a new generation of varieties we're bringing to the market,' Commercial Director Jack Darnes said.
Summer Berry, which uses robotics and artificial intelligence technology to help with the harvesting process, grows varieties including Fandango, Karima and Florice, which Darnes said are larger and sweeter.
'With Malling Centenary three or four days later they're still okay, with the new varieties you can survive even longer - six to seven days. So it's reducing waste, it's a better product for the end consumer,' he said.
'We hope one day there's going to be a new summer berry variety that people at Wimbledon are going to be consuming even better than Malling Centenary,' he added.
Malling Centenary does not suffer the same fate as its predecessor, the Elsanta Variety, which, according to Darnes, is no longer produced in the UK.
The UK produces 120,000 tonnes of strawberries each year, generating retail sales of up to 700 million pounds, said Darnes.
The global market is estimated at about 10,000,000 tonnes, with a value of $20 billion, according to German agriculture company Bayer.
($1 = 0.7289 pounds)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Former champions Morikawa, Smith, Oosthuizen miss Open cut
Former champions Morikawa, Smith, Oosthuizen miss Open cut

CNA

time2 hours ago

  • CNA

Former champions Morikawa, Smith, Oosthuizen miss Open cut

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland :Former British Open champions Collin Morikawa, Darren Clarke, Zach Johnson, Stewart Cink, Louis Oosthuizen, Padraig Harrington and Cameron Smith missed the cut mark of one over par at Portrush on Friday. Australian Smith, the winner at St Andrews in 2022, finished on eight over, one shot better than Ireland's Harrington, the twice champion who had the honour of hitting the opening tee shot in the tournament. Major champions Adam Scott, Jason Day, Brooks Koepka and Patrick Reed also failed to qualify for the weekend. Six-times major winner Phil Mickelson did make the cut on level-par, along with Sweden's Henrik Stenson who beat the American in an epic final-round showdown to lift the 2016 Claret Jug at Troon.

Fabulous Fitzpatrick fuels English hopes at Open after dazzling 66
Fabulous Fitzpatrick fuels English hopes at Open after dazzling 66

CNA

time3 hours ago

  • CNA

Fabulous Fitzpatrick fuels English hopes at Open after dazzling 66

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland :Matt Fitzpatrick raised hopes of a first English winner of the British Open for 33 years with a masterful five-under-par 66 to move second at the halfway point at Royal Portrush on Friday. Many have come close since Nick Faldo lifted the Claret Jug for the third time in 1992, with the likes of Lee Westwood, Ian Poulter, Justin Rose and Tommy Fleetwood all falling just short. When Fitzpatrick curled a 23-foot par-saving putt into the hole at the 18th in late evening sunshine, it kept him top of the leaderboard on nine under and although he was dislodged by Scottie Scheffler he will head into the weekend with high hopes. "Giving myself an opportunity to win the golf tournament, but there's still a hell of a long way to go," the Sheffield-born world number 59 Fitzpatrick told reporters. "Obviously the aim of the game is to stay in it for as long as possible and hopefully you can pull away right at the death. "I'm 50 per cent there. We'll see what the weekend brings." His weekend will start by going toe-to-toe with world number one Scheffler in the final pairing on Saturday after the American showed he meant business with a brilliant 64 on Friday, the lowest round of the week so far. It will be a formidable test for 2022 U.S. Open champion, whose best Open finish to date is a tie for 20th six years ago. Fitzpatrick, 30, said the English drought does not add any pressure on his shoulders, insisting three-time major winner Scheffler will be expected now to go on and claim his Open triumph. "He's going to have the expectation to go out and dominate. He's an exceptional player. He's world number one," Fitzpatrick said. "We're seeing Tiger-like stuff. "I think the pressure is for him to win the golf tournament. For me obviously I hope I'm going to have some more home support than him, but it's an exciting position for me to be in given where I was earlier this year." Fitzpatrick has not won since 2023 but after a slow start to this season appears to have emerged from his slump. He finished eighth at the PGA Championship and recorded top-10 placings in his last two events, including fourth at the Scottish Open last week. A first-round 67 gave Fitzpatrick a share of the overnight lead and on Friday he got on a roll with eight birdies firing right into contention. "I felt like every facet of my game was on today and I felt like I really played solid," he said. "To take advantage of the opportunities I had out there was obviously really positive."

Equities edge down, US dollar dips with tariffs; earnings, economic data in focus
Equities edge down, US dollar dips with tariffs; earnings, economic data in focus

CNA

time5 hours ago

  • CNA

Equities edge down, US dollar dips with tariffs; earnings, economic data in focus

NEW YORK/LONDON :U.S. equities were slightly lower on Friday, a day after the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq scored record closes, as investors looked ahead to corporate earnings and monitored the latest U.S. tariff threats as they digested economic data, while the dollar weakened and U.S. Treasury yields fell. U.S. consumer sentiment improved in July and inflation expectations declined, but households still saw substantial risk of price pressures increasing in the future, the University of Michigan's Surveys of Consumers released on Friday showed. Another report showed U.S. single-family homebuilding dropped to an 11-month low in June as high mortgage rates and economic uncertainty hampered home purchases, suggesting residential investment contracted again in the second quarter. On Thursday, news of stronger-than-expected U.S. retail sales and jobless claims data suggested modest improvements in economic activity, helping to push equities higher. On Friday, the mood dimmed after the Financial Times reported that U.S. President Donald Trump is pushing for a minimum tariff of 15 per cent to 20 per cent in any deal with the European Union, was unmoved by the latest EU offer to reduce car tariffs, and would keep duties there at 25 per cent as planned. "Tariff headlines this afternoon reminded investors that volatility is likely to persist through the start of August." said Lindsey Bell, Chief Investment Strategist at 248 Ventures. "Investors may be taking some money off the table going into the weekend given lingering tariff uncertainty and a market that has a premium valuation after reaching new highs." She noted that these concerns were on display in shares of American Express and Netflix, which both fell after solid earnings reports and forecasts as both companies had extended valuations ahead of the results. Still, many investors had high hopes for upcoming earnings and were making bullish bets ahead of July equity option expirations, said Bruce Zaro, managing director at Granite Wealth Management in Plymouth, Massachusetts. "Today's action is all about option expiration as investors make bets on the meat of earnings season, which comes in the next few weeks when all the growth and technology companies report," said Zaro, noting that beyond earnings, investors want to benefit from a strong performance trend in megacap names. "There's a fear of missing out." On Wall Street at 02:32 p.m. the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 218.65 points, or 0.49 per cent, to 44,265.84, the S&P 500 fell 5.42 points, or 0.09 per cent, to 6,291.94 and the Nasdaq Composite rose 1.58 points, or 0.01 per cent, to 20,887.80. MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe rose 0.74 points, or 0.08 per cent, to 927.03. Earlier, Europe's STOXX 600 index closed down 0.01 per cent, and was off 0.06 per cent for the week. In currencies, the U.S. dollar slipped on the day but was still angling for a weekly gain, as investors weighed signs that tariffs may be starting to fuel inflation pressures and monitored Federal Reserve policy as Trump increases pressure on Chair Jerome Powell. The euro pared some gains after the FT report on a toughening U.S. stance on European import tariffs. The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies including the yen and the euro, fell 0.04 per cent to 98.47. The euro was up 0.24 per cent at $1.1623 versus a $1.1671 high for the session so far. Against the Japanese yen, the dollar strengthened 0.1 per cent to 148.75 as polls showed Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's coalition was in danger of losing its majority in an election on Sunday. U.S. Treasuries prices rose, dragging their yields lower, after comments from Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller pushed for a rate cut later this month, while technical buying also contributed to the move higher. In contrast, most officials who have spoken publicly have indicated a desire to hold rates steady and traders are betting on a 95.3 per cent probability that rates will stay where they are after the month-end meeting, according to CME Group's FedWatch tool. The yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year notes fell 3.7 basis points to 4.426 per cent, from 4.463 per cent late on Thursday while the 30-year bond yield fell 1.9 basis points to 4.9947 per cent from 5.014 per cent. The 2-year note yield, which typically moves in step with interest rate expectations for the Federal Reserve, fell 4.6 basis points to 3.871 per cent, from 3.917 per cent late on Thursday. In commodities, crude oil futures held steady as mixed U.S. economic news offset worries the European Union's latest sanctions against Russia for its war in Ukraine could reduce oil supplies. U.S. crude settled down 0.3 per cent, or 20 cents at $67.34 a barrel while Brent ended at $69.28 per barrel, down 0.35 per cent or 24 cents on the day. Gold prices rose on Friday as a weaker U.S. dollar and ongoing geopolitical and economic uncertainty boosted demand for the safe-haven metal, while platinum prices eased after reaching their highest level since 2014. Spot gold rose 0.41 per cent to $3,352.13 an ounce and spot.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store