Four-time world champion Dame Susan Devoy is at the squash national championships, but this time she is not a competitor, but is there to coach three of her four sons.
She's there to coach three of her four sons
Joshua and little brother Jamie may have inherited a gift for squash, but their mother, Dame Sevoy, is teaching her sons that there is more to winning than natural talent.
"It's not about the score, it's about how we play the game," she tells them. "And I'm not talking about that PC stuff, but you have to learn to be good sports and we've been through some trying times."
Like charity, rivalry begins at home for the four fiercely competitive brothers.
"Every time we go down the courts there's a fight about who's won the point or something like that," 12-year-old Joshua says.
This weekend they are testing themselves on a bigger stage - the junior nationals - and they are learning to cope with life with a famous parent.
"It's quite hard being my kids," Devoy says. "There's an expectation as they get older and they're teenagers, it's a bit hard and somewhat embarrassing even."
But at 10-years-old, Jamie could care less that his mother is a four-time world champ.
Devoy dominated the world of women's squash in the 1980s, but now she has met her match.
"It's hard as a parent to coach your own children, they're not really interested, I can understand that," Devoy says.
The boys have been encouraged to play other sports, as a career in men's squash is not easy.
"I sort of wish I had a daughter," Devoy says. "There'd be an ideal opportunity to be a world champion, but I hope they play it because they enjoy it."
Both Jamie and Joshua managed to finish third in their age group at the nationals.
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