Alleyn Old Folk Take On The Old-School-Real-Tennis World, The Cattermull Cup, 11 & 12 April 2026

Me and Simon Barton in our Alleyn’s School shirts. Photo by Paul Cattermull

Soon after I started playing real tennis, in 2016, I ran into Paul Cattermull in the viewing gallery at Lord’s. Paul and I had worked together years before, at Binder Hamlyn. I told Paul that I was enjoying the game enormously but finding it really difficult.

But why, Ian? It’s a bit like cricket. Move your feet, get your head over the ball, watch the ball and keep your head still as you hit it…

Indeed, all the shortcomings and techniques I struggled with at cricket are also there to torment me in real tennis. But at least with tennis, if you make a mistake, you just lose one point. Well,15, if you are counting the time-honoured tennis way, but you get my meaning.

Technique wanting in 2016 and still

Actually it is more like fives than cricket – and at Alleyn’s I was just a bit more than OK at fives.

Anyway, with perseverance and years of fun sporting activity, I have worked my way up the real tennis handicap charts to being very, very average at the game. Indeed, when the Tennis & Rackets Association re-based the handicaps last year, my doubles handicap straddled the median pre and post adjustment value of 55.

As I progressed from “absolute beginner” into “showing some progress towards ordinariness” category, Paul suggested that I find a fellow alum from Alleyn’s School to enter his eponymous “old school” handicap doubles tournament. It was a lovely idea, but for the absence of such an alum with whom to partner.

Then, in January 2025, just before I went into hospital to have my right hip replaced, I had an interesting locker-room chat with relative newbie Simon Barton, which I reported here, learning that Simon too went to Alleyn’s:

Thus the plot was hatched and we agreed to attempt the tournament.

Simon is able to boast having had a single digit handicap and even now maintains a handicap of 14. Unfortunately for me and for our Cattermull Cup campaign, that’s his golf handicap. Simon’s real tennis handicap is in the 70s.

That makes the Cattermull Cup a tough ask for Alleyn’s. Simon’s handicap is above the cut off for this tournament and my limited ability will struggle to cover that shortfall. But we agreed that it would be good experience to give the tournament a go this year, albeit as the lowest ranked pair. We entered in hope, but not with expectation.

Alongside this uphill sporting endeavour, Simon and I have also formed a rather unusual, some might say ghoulish, connection over our avocational history research projects. I am looking at the MCC’s role in the development of cricket and tennis (real and lawn) in the mid to late 19th century, not least the extraordinary efforts of Robert Allan Fitzgerald. Meanwhile Simon, who is described by the website topdoctors.co.uk as an expert in sexual health, is, as one of his hobbies, researching the history of STDs in a similar period.

Parenthetically, biology teacher Tom Gascoigne would have been extremely proud of Simon’s post Alleyn’s medical achievements (as would Chris Liffen & John Clarke), despite Mr Gascoigne’s preference for researching sacoglossan penial styles rather than the penial afflictions of humans.

Robert Allan Fitzgerald, first paid Secretary of the MCC, 1863-1876. “Retired due to ill health” 1876 and died tragically young in 1881, a victim of tertiary syphilis.

I’m pretty sure that Mr Jenkins would have thoroughly approved of the unusual subject-matter in Simon’s and my history projects. With Mr Jenkins’s consent, I researched the 7th century origins of Islam for my third year history project and the 19th century origins of the cinema as my ‘O’ Level history project.

 Eadweard Muybridge – moving image pioneer. Mr Jenkins style of history favoured eccentric characters with unusual back-stories, especially chaps with fulsome beards

As Simon put it oh so succinctly after our third thrashing in three warm up matches in preparation for our tournament:

Simon Barton: Better on syphilis than at tennis…

…which I think is a great tag line.

As I have also been bringing Jacobethan music and drama to the world of real tennis of late…

…I might similarly go for:

Ian Harris: Better on Jacobethan music and drama than at tennis.

…but Simon’s poxy tag line is more infectious than mine.

Anyway, all the above blurb is merely a maxi preamble to my mini match report on the 2026 Cattermull Cup from the Alleyn’s School team perspective.

No Sets Please, We’re Alleyn’s: The Tournament Itself, Middlesex University Real Tennis Court

All the gear…

We were properly prepared. Simon procured a brace of Alleyn’s School tennis shirts, which went down well with the organisers. My choice of team name did not go down quite so well.

I had imagined that the teams had alum-oriented team names and that some of them might be imaginative and witty. But it turned out that “Alleyn Old Folk” was the only team with a waggish name.

We found ourselves in a group comprising Clifton (multiple former winners), Harrow 2 (Harrow are also multiple former winners), Highgate & Alleyn Old Folk.

Let us not delve too deeply into exactly what happened in our round robin group. Suffice it to say that we were not humiliated in any of our matches – no bagels and no breadsticks. Harrow prevailed in our group, deservedly so, winning all three of its rubbers.

When I called Janie before setting off for home, we had the following conversation:

JANIE: How did you get on?

ME: Not too bad – we came fourth in our group.

JANIE: That’s amazing! How many teams were there in your group?

ME: Four.

JANIE: Ah, not quite so amazing then. But did you enjoy yourselves?

ME: Of course we did.

As always with real tennis, it was a convivial yet competitive afternoon with a great bunch of people, many of whom I know well from other matches and tournaments. It was a great learning experience for both of us. In Simon’s case, his first taste of such a match/tournament against lower handicappers. In my case, the challenge of trying to find tactics that would give us a chance to win some games in the sets, as once you are in the mix with games on the board, anything can happen in a one-set-to-six shoot-out.

And there’s always next year, by which time, hopefully, Simon will have a bit more experience under his belt and a better (hopefully uncapped) handicap to bring to the party.

I am imagining what Simon’s and my sports masters would have to say about all of this.

Good on you, chaps. Fine sporting effort for the school. Keep trying.
Better luck next time.
Harris – would you please mark some matches for me on Tuesday?

Colin Page (1926-2021)
Messsrs Banson & Page watching on c1977

I told you both that you were utterly useless at sport.

Barry Banson (1933-2025)

Epilogue: The Finals

Janie & I played our traditional game of lawn an hour earlier than usual in order to get to Middlesex in reasonable time. At least I manged to scrape one set this weekend…just.

We arrived as the losing Sherborne pair were departing, bemoaning their narrow fate in a tight semi against Rugby (6-2, 6-5). On taking up our viewing positions, I asked one of the victors, Charles Whitworth, to encapsulate the Sherborne match in a few words:

Adrian Warburton’s devilish bobble serve,

came the reply.

We had arrived early in the second set of the second semi-final: Norwich School v Harrow 2. The Norwich School team comprised Tim Edwards, whom Janie and I got to know when we were in Newport Rhode Island for the World Championship last year…

…and Reuben Ard, whose finest ever performance on a tennis court so far, in my opinion, was his “electric virginals” rendition of The Earl Of Salisbury Pavan at The Royal Tennis Court during the 2023 Gresham Society Visit performance I organised and referenced earlier in this piece. The video below, thanks to Janie, really is a charming and atmospheric Elizabethan musical interlude.

Norwich’s opponents were Harrow 2, Sebastien Maurin & James Charatan, who had proved 2-much for me and Simon Barton the previous day in our group.

Harrow 2 also proved to be too much for Norwich in a close run match (6-5, 6-4), despite Reuben Ard’s relentless pounding of the grille and tambour. At one point he achieved a hat-trick of grille winners, which I have only ever witnessed once before, when Alex Gibson pulled off such a stunt in the 2023 MCC Club Weekend C/D Groups Final. Unfortunately there is no video evidence of Reuben’s achievement, which was rather more muscular than Alex’s, whereas the last two of Alex’s three grille shots are captured here:

I have ever since called that achievement the “Coup De Gibson”. I briefly considered changing the name now to “Coup D’Ard”, but that sounds more like something emanating from the manosphere than a real tennis achievement, so we’ll stick with Coup De Gibson.

Both semi-finals were played between pairs with vastly differing handicaps and were won by the pair that was receiving a significant handicap. The final was very different – just a four point difference separated the two – (Harrow received half 15 from Rugby).

It looked on paper as though it was going to be a tight match, but when it came to the action on plaster and wood and stone rather than paper…

…it was an incredibly tight match. I think at least half of the games went to 40-40. Certainly the first handful of games in each of the first two sets did so. It was compelling viewing and it was impossible to tell which way the match would go until the last few minutes, when the Rugby team applied one or two new tricks which did just enough to confound the Harrow pair. (5-6, 6-3, 6-4).

Callum Grier & Charles Whitworth of Rugby, receiving the trophy from Janie

Will Burns, James Charatan, Sebastien Maurin, Callum Grier, Charles Whitworth, Paul Cattermull & Jack Carter

It was an enjoyable watch in good company, as is real tennis’s way. Hopefully next year…or at least some year…I’ll be at The Cattermull Cup on finals day as a player rather than a spectator.

An Open Letter To Colm Holmes, Allianz UK CEO, Wondering Why, More Than Six Months After The Financial Ombudsman Ruled In My Favour In The Woodfield Avenue Subsidence Case (2019 To Present Day), I Am Still Fighting A Wall Of Silence, 6 April 2026

Happier times with a wall, c60 years ago: Our House

Colm Holmes, Allianz UK CEO, 57 Ladymead, Guildford, Surrey, GU1 1DB

ALSO BY E-MAIL TO RELEVANT PEOPLE & OPENLY PUBLISHED ON MY OWN MEDIA

Dear Colm,

COMPLAINT: REGARDING 3 WOODFIELD AVENUE, STREATHAM, LONDON SW16FAILURE TO COMPLY WITH OMBUDSMAN FINAL DECISION (Ref: PNX-5254672-Y6R6)

I don’t make a habit of complaining to Chief Executives of public companies, but Allianz’s conduct in this instance has been so poor and falls so far short of commercial decency, I believe that you and the public should be made aware of it. I think it is a matter of public concern that a legally binding, final decision from the Financial Ombudsman Service is being delayed and ignored by Allianz.

Minor subsidence was first spotted and reported to Allianz in the autumn of 2019.  Less than a year later, following significant damage resulting from the subsidence, losses started to arise. I shall not delve in this letter into the Allianz-led problems that have bedevilled this insurance claim from the outset.

Suffice it to say that Allianz’s poor conduct and performance is documented in detail in my complaint to the Ombudsman in August 2024, which was clearly determined in my favour on 16 September 2025: PNX-5254672-Y6R6 (decision attached). I accepted the decision on that same day.

Frankly, you should be horrified at some of my grounds for complaint between 2019 and 2024.  Allianz’s original attempt to deny liability for loss of rent in 2020 and the dishonest attempt by Allianz’s contractors, pretending that there had been storm damage in January 2021, whereas in fact they were simply lying about having done work, is bad enough.  The fact that the claim was still open and the root cause not addressed until the claim was nearly five years old was strongly censured by the Ombudsman.  I need not repeat his criticisms.

My complaint directly to you is because I have been met solely with silence from Allianz since the Ombudsman made his decision.  I was told that I should hear within four weeks of the decision.  I wrote on 6 November 2025, then again 26 November 2025 and understand that the Ombudsman also followed up with Allianz on my behalf. 

A lump of money arrived in my bank account from Allianz on 28 November 2025 but without any accompanying correspondence; no statement, no calculation, and no letter of explanation. It is impossible for me to reconcile this with the Ombudsman’s ruling.  It does not accord with computations I have made as to the sums I might now expect, based on the principles set out in the Ombudsman’s decision. I wrote again 15 December 2025 asking for an explanation and a computation for final settlement, presenting my own computation.  The Crawford loss adjuster responded to the 15 December e-mail asking me to be patient and promising a response before Christmas. 

On 15 January 2026 I wrote to Allianz & Crawford again, as I had again been met with a wall of silence. On 20 February 2026 Crawford wrote again, stating, I have not received instructions from your insurers, and I am conscious that another month has passed. He said he had advised Allianz to make a partial payment of c£12,000 towards the remaining sums owing to me (my estimate c£20,000), which he promised would be forthcoming. 

He wrote again on 5 March asking for my bank details again, which I sent by return, promising, partial payment should follow in 7-10 days.“  Needless to say no partial payment has been forthcoming.  Nor have my constant requests for warranties and certificates of adequacy since the remedial work was completed in October 2025 been met with anything other than silence. Without the certificates of adequacy and warranties for the 2025 works, the property remains effectively uninsurable (with anyone other than Allianz) and unsaleable, not that I curently wish to sell the house.

In short, I am near my wits end.  The Ombudsman has clearly expressed his decision and the remedial work has theorietically been signed off, but I am some £20,000 short of where I should be and I still do not have documents to evidence that the property has formally been secured and restored.    

Although the property is enveloped in a body corporate, it is still the family home in which I grew up.  I enveloped it in Trust as a protective for my mother when she developed dementia before she died; hence the body corporate now.  While I understand that, in a formal sense, emotion does not come into it in corporate circumstances, I cannot help but feel upset and exhausted by the sorry way the matter has been handled by Allianz and its contractors, in so many shoddy ways, for so many years. 

As my wife constantly points out to me – 3 Woodfield Avenue could easily still have been my family home.  It could easily still have been my late mother’s sanctuary in her declining years.  Such properties often are owned and/or occupied by vulnerable people, who would not be able to stand up for their rights as I have been able to stand up for mine.    

Our sense is that Allianz (and probably other insurers like it) have a systemic, seemingly mendacious  issue with the ways such claims are often handled.  Even the Ombudsman seems powerless to get Allianz to act promptly and decently. 

Such poor conduct by a public company like Allianz and its agents should be called out in public.  The systemic issues that underlie such poor conduct should be addressed by Allianz and by the insurance sector gnerally. 

No-one should have to go through what I have been through over a slightly complicated, but basically standard, subsidence claim in suburban England.  I await your comments and proposed actions with great interest.

Yours sincerely

Ian Harris

Enc.

cc: The Financial Ombudsman Service, BBC Radio 4 ‘You and Yours’ (Investigation Desk), BBC ‘Money Box’ (Consumer Redress Team), The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) (Consumer Protection Division), Crawford & Company

Innocently hoping for the utmost good faith, c1966

Dinner At Yogi’s With John White, 1 April 2026

Image from Saffron Walden, Nov 2024: John is still sporting that pork pie hat

When Janie and I went, in February, for the first time in a while, to the Finborough theatre…

…we were delighted to see that, at last, what had been a deserted space underneath the theatre, formerly the Finborough Arms, had been revived and reopened as a rather sprauncy-looking Indian Restaurant; Yogi’s Kensington.

We popped in, took a look around, smelt the mouth-watering smells – such an improvement on the stale chip fat smell that had been the Finborough Arms kitchen’s trademark smell for some while before that place closed down – and even picked up a menu for future reference.

The small print is detailed descriptions of dishes

Anyway, I thought this place sounded right up John’s street. It was my turn to choose and John leapt at the idea when he looked at the menu on-line. Simples.

Here’s what we ate – the first two dishes being starters to share:

  • Hot Garlic Honey Fish – Honey glazed spicy, tangy fish with bold garlic chili flavors.
  • Chicken 65 – Chennai-style marinated juliennes of chicken, mild Smoked chilli sauce, curry leaves
  • Lasooni Methi Lamb – cooked in fresh fenugreek, garlic with special indian spice
  • Goan Curry Prawns – cooked in fresh coconut with authentic kokan spice
  • Dal Makhani – Slow cooked black lentils with red kidney beans
  • Saffron Pilaf Rice – Fregnante rice cooked with saffron
  • Plain Naan

Washed down with some beer (in John’s case) followed by wine by the glass in both of our cases.

Every dish was delicious.

So absorbed were we in our conversations and delight in the food, we both forgot to take food porn photos – that’s twice in a row we’ve dined without photos.

Never mind.

Want to know what Dal Makhani looks like? – Here’s a lovely picture of same from Wikimedia Commons thanks to Soumendra Kumar Sahoo, who knows how to make…or at least how to photograph…the stuff.

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Rice_and_Dal_Makhni.jpg

As always, it was great to get together with John. We didn’t quite solve all the world’s problems this time, so I guess we should get together again quite soon and have another go at the problems…or at least have another fine meal together.