Fans of the Apple TV show can stroll through Richmond Green and drink a pint at the real Crown and Anchor
LessLasso’s favorite hot beverage is coffee, and perhaps Richmond’s best cup can be found at Kiss the Hippo, where a variety of espresso and drip options are available.
Paved Court is the narrow lane where Ted lives in the show (at No. 9½, which is actually No. 11).
The Prince’s Head is handsome. Inside it’s pretty typical of pubs you’ll find in London’s posher southwestern suburbs. There’s a blackboard listing food specials, lots of brown wood, plenty of dogs, and Fuller’s tasty beer, brewed across the river in Chiswick.
Here you'll find a boisterous multiroom pub with a sprawling back garden and its own Brentford-themed beer, Come On You Bees, plus red-and-white-striped walls to match the club’s uniform.
A vintage Fulham scarf behind the bar subtly denotes its allegiance. A range of beers from Timothy Taylor, one of England’s greatest traditional breweries, provides another compelling reason to visit.
Known as “The Sloaney Pony” because of its posh clientele, The White Horse combines Victorian decor with good food and excellent beer of all kinds.
In Selhurst Park, 45 minutes from Richmond by train, try the Shelverdine Goathouse for pre-match drinks.
Their jerk chicken (8.50 pounds for a large portion) is one of London’s best pre-match meals.
Stamford Bridge (Chelsea) has been subdued of late, as fans used to trophy after trophy struggle with this season’s mediocrity.
Craven Cottage (Fulham FC) can be reserved one minute and raucous the next.
The Gtech, home to Brentford FC and the pokiest of all, holds just over 17,000 fans, most of them season-ticket holders
The Famous Three Kings in West Kensington has a variety of screens showing soccer and other sports.
Gaucho in Richmond, a good-quality chain steakhouse overlooking the Thames, is where Roy Kent and Keeley go on a date in Season 2.
Interested in the kind of grub that caused Ted to “breathe fire” during a meal in Season 1? Babur is one of London's best Indian restaurants.
This is London’s last intact 1950s ballroom, a riot of deep-red fittings, and it’s in the middle of Brockley, the neighborhood where legendary striker-turned-TV pundit Ian Wright (appears in Season 3) grew up. It's where much of the episode “For The Children” was shot.