The Royal Family dropped a centenary gem on the final day of Wimbledon 2026, and it involves a royal L that nobody’s been talking about for a hundred years.
The official Royal Family account posted a little-known history note to mark the close of the 2026 Championships. It revealed that King George VI became the first and only member of the Royal Family ever to compete at Wimbledon. He did it exactly 100 years ago, in 1926. He entered the Gentlemen’s Doubles. He lost. Badly.
The caption put it bluntly: “It was, alas, a resounding defeat!” Then the post wrapped it up with a line nobody could top: “Ah well, there’s always the strawberries!”
Now that’s keeping it real.
King George VI reigned from 1936 until his death in 1952. He’s probably best remembered today for his wartime speeches and the stammer he overcame to deliver them. That story reached a wide audience through the 2010 film “The King’s Speech.” His daughter, Queen Elizabeth II, went on to reign for 70 years. He’s a serious historical figure.
But before all that? He was out here losing tennis matches at Wimbledon. Respect.
The Royal Family timed the post to land on the final day of the 2026 Championships. It’s a clever move. The whole world’s eyes were on the All England Club for the day’s finals. Right in the middle of all that, the Royal Family account slipped in a hundred-year-old fact. Most people had no idea King George VI ever picked up a Wimbledon racket.
George VI entered the Gentlemen’s Doubles in 1926 – not the singles. In doubles, you’ve got a partner to share the weight. That didn’t help. The caption didn’t name his partner or their opponents, but the result speaks for itself.
The real story here is the participation. No other Royal Family member has ever stepped onto a Wimbledon court as a competitor, before or since. George VI competed in 1926. He wouldn’t become king until 1936, nearly a decade later. Back then, he was still Prince Albert, Duke of York. He was just a guy with a love of tennis. He gave it a shot and got bounced out.
That’s kind of cool, actually. Not every story needs to end in triumph to be worth remembering.
The post closed with a nod to the iconic Wimbledon tradition of strawberries and cream. Exactly the right energy. Take the loss, grab a snack, move on. The Royal Family’s got enough historical wins to handle one tennis defeat with a smile.
The 2026 Championships are in the books. Go ahead and raise a bowl of strawberries to King George VI – the only royal who ever had the guts to pick up a racket at the most famous tennis tournament in the world.
