But if you are Jeff Lucas, IT director of the All England Lawn Tennis and
Croquet Club, the host of Wimbledon, it means much more than two weeks’ work
each year. Months of planning and preparation is essential for one of the most
visible uses of technology in the world.
‘We want people to enjoy the tennis here as much as they can without the
technology having an impact on them. It is about watching tennis in an English
garden,’ says Lucas. ‘But outside here, we are very keen to make sure we use as
much technology as we can to get that experience to people who cannot come
here.’
The start of Wimbledon might represent the beginning of summer for many in
the UK, but for Lucas it is the culmination of a year’s work – every year.
‘We run the ballot for ticket applications in January, and start to accredit
press at that time, and our press office opens and uses our systems. In late
March and early April, we run what we call our spring test,’ he says.
‘We try to run the tournament, with all the component parts, or as much as we
can. We do everything from running the tournament, generating scores, creating
TV graphics on the computers, and we run an information system at the ground –
the Wimbledon Information System – that contains a lot of historical
information, a very rich archive of material,’ he says.
‘From spring we start to roll out the systems. The referee’s office opens in
early May to take enquiries and entries. The players start to arrive about 10
days before Wimbledon for the qualifying rounds, and then it all starts to wind
up quite significantly.’
Preparations started as last year’s championships came to a close. ‘The
second week of the tournament is the best time to get everyone together to talk
about what we want to do next year, while they are all here. You work all year
to get there, and as it is happening you are already starting to think about
next year,’ says Lucas.
‘The week after the championships is also quite a hectic time because people
are taking stuff away. The broadcasters remove their equipment, and IBM comes to
take all its kit out, although the core servers are here all year round. There
are two weeks of intensive activity of stripping everything out. And then we go
back to being a private members club.’
The wider role
Lucas has been running Wimbledon’s IT since 1995, after joining from drinks
firm Grand Metropolitan, now part of Diageo.
‘What attracted me to the role was that it is an executive level position,
not just IT but everything to do with the running of the club. I enjoy the
opportunity to participate in that,’ he says.
‘I am also involved in some of the commercial aspects of what we do, looking
at strategy and so forth. I like the idea that you can do something one year,
enhance it and move it on and grow the systems.’
The role is a unique mix of two quite different jobs. ‘I have a small team,
only six of us, and we all wear two hats – one running the championships and one
running a small business. We find that running a small business becomes a bigger
part all the time. During the off-season we expanded the systems we run, and we
now have over 100 regular users,’ says Lucas.
‘We find that as the championships come along, we only get a three-month
window, between September and December, to do anything for our back office.’
Sponsor and key IT supplier IBM also plays
a critical role.
‘IBM has two people that work here permanently. They are, to all intents and
purposes, part of the team. That team grows from January onwards, focusing on
different aspects. IBM brings in huge amounts of temporary kit, mainly PCs and
printers, which are configured and distributed around the ground,’ he says.
‘They also train the data entry people – good tennis players who are IT
literate, who capture all the scores and statistics from the show courts. We
have more than 200 people in IT during the tournament. Ramping up to that is an
interesting time.’
During the championships, Lucas says his main function is making sure
everything is running smoothly.
‘I’m the fittest I’ll ever be on the last day of the tournament – the rest of
the time is spent wandering around talking to people ensuring everything is
going fine,’ he says.
‘I get here about 8am during the championships because play generally doesn’t
start until 11am, so the morning is when, if anything needs to be done, it gets
done. I have a meeting about 9.30am with the referee and the TV graphics people
to make sure everything went well the day before and to resolve any issues. And
in the afternoon I have a meeting with the web team.’
The web site itself is run by IBM in Atlanta, in the US. ‘IBM has an overall
consulting and management operation to keep an eye on everything, but the three
key things for them are TV graphics, feeding through to the media information
system, and the web site,’ says Lucas.
Disaster alerts
The feed of graphics to broadcasters is a critical function, because if it
stops working television viewers worldwide know instantly.
‘The BBC has a red telephone in the TV graphics room where IBM’s operations
are. If that were to ring you would be in trouble. I’m happy to say it hasn’t
rung for a while. Although somebody did ring it last year and said, “We haven’t
had anybody call on this phone, is it still working?”,’ says Lucas.
IT projects too often have a reputation for being late, over budget, and not
meeting requirements. But for Lucas, these are simply not an option.
‘The one thing we cannot ever do here is be late,’ he says. ‘You need a
discipline for delivery. If you work in an industry where you are allowed to let
things slip, then they will slip. If I moved into another role now, I would be
much more confident of being able to achieve a deadline. That is a lesson that
you learn here – it is simply not an option to let things slip.’
If you are a tennis fan, you would think the role of Wimbledon IT director
would be your dream job – but don’t expect to see much play, even when the sun
shines.
‘I usually only get to see the tennis on television,’ says Lucas. ‘The best
time to see anything is in the evening, I have seen more doubles matches on
Centre Court than anything. But it is always pleasant to stop and remind
yourself why we are here and what it is we are doing.’
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