‘Special' Jack Draper and Gael Monfils embrace brings out the best of the French Open
When Jack Draper and Gael Monfils met at the net at the end of their epic late-night French Open battle, they fell into each other's arms. They had put on a dazzling show. The thrilling Monfils, ever the entertainer, rose to the challenge and had the home fans pleading for more. With a fifth set beckoning, Draper dug deep. He won the final four games in a row to win a classic, 6-3 4-6 6-3 7-5.
Not bad for your debut on Court Philippe-Chatrier, silencing the raucous crowd just as the 38-year-old Monfils whipped them into a frenzy. 'It was special to be a part of tonight,' Draper told TNT Sports. 'Massive respect to Gael on and off the court, for what he brings. He makes it so tough. But I was happy with how I competed in a really tough environment.'
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It should have gone to a fifth. Monfils came out swinging, repelling Draper at every turn, and then breaking the British No 1. When Monfils saved five break points to lead 5-2, requiring a double bounce off the net-cord to stay ahead, it seemed as if the veteran Frenchman would go fighting late into the night. He had delved deep into the box of tricks, moving superbly, and was in inspired form. 'A great night. A great match,' said Monfils.
Monfils was in inspired form on Court Philippe-Chatrier (Getty)
Monfils is the king of the late-night Chatrier comeback. He had done so in the opening round, recovering from an early injury when he smashed into the advertising hoardings to battle from two sets down and defeat Hugo Dellien. Once again, Monfils looked to be winding back the clock. He had absorbed a lightning start from Draper, the fifth seed, and turned it into a proper contest.
Draper may have been taking to Chatrier for the first time, but the 23-year-old looked comfortable going the distance. He has been a different player since his series of five-set epics at the Australian Open in January, and is growing on confidence on the clay with each passing match. Draper saved two set points on serve at 5-4, finding big serves to stay alive. It was clutch and he stayed cool.
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'5-3, 30-Love. Every point was hard,' Monfils said. 'I was really returning the balls very well. He really played his game well. Honestly, I couldn't do a lot. I played my forehand down the line. It went out. And he played well after that.'
Draper admitted his brain had been 'fried' earlier on, as Monfils turned the match around by mixing up his game and producing a variety that had Draper's head spinning. 'What an experience, what a battle against someone I admire as a tennis player,' he said. 'Off the court, the guy is so nice. He's a joker, he's a magician, I hope he makes it back here one more time.'
Monfils was beginning to limp as Draper levelled the fourth set. He sensed his moment to strike and his heavy top-spin forehand found its mark to get over the line. Afterwards, the Frenchman was just as effusive in his praise of his opponent. 'I love this player. I love the way he plays,' Monfils said.
Up next for Draper? The 18-year-old Joao Fonseca, Brazil's rising star. Both players will be looking to reach the fourth round of the French Open for the first time.
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There is already guaranteed to be one British player in the last-16, with Cameron Norrie and Jacob Fearnley through to play each other. Norrie defeated the Argentine lucky loser Federico Agustin Gomez in straight-sets, while Fearnley, who is making his Roland Garros debut, advanced when Frenchman Ugo Humbert retired injured while trailing 6-4 4-4.
Fearnley holds up his hands after making it through to the French Open third round for the first time (Getty Images)
Humbert, the 22nd seed, went over his right ankle as he ran sideways behind the baseline. He immediately held his right calf went off the court for treatment. Humbert attempted to play on but immediately lost his serve before walking to the net to shake hands. 'Obviously happy to be in the third round. But definitely not the way I would have wanted to do it,' Fearnley said.
A reward for either Norrie or Fearnley could be a last-16 clash with Novak Djokovic, who will next play qualifier Filip Misolic. Djokovic defeated Frenchman Corentin Moutet in straight-sets, while there were also victories for Alexander Zverev and Jannik Sinner, who retired the 38-year-old Richard Gasquet with a 6-3 6-0 6-4 on the Frenchman's final Roland Garros appearance.
There were defeats for second-round Katie Boulter and Sonay Kartal. Boulter suffered a heavy defeat to Madison Keys, the Australian Open champion, going down 6-1 6-3 on Chatrier while Kartal was beaten 6-1 6-4 by Marie Bouzkova. Second seed Coco Gauff, third seed Jessica Pegula and sixth seed Mirra Andreeva all enjoyed wins in straight-sets.
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New York Times
22 minutes ago
- New York Times
Świątek's turnaround swift and merciless
Follow live coverage of the fourth round at Roland Garros with U.S. stars Ben Shelton and Frances Tiafoe aiming to join Tommy Paul in the quarters Getty Images The fourth round of the 2025 French Open is underway as several American stars aim for the quarterfinals at Roland Garros in Paris. Ben Shelton (13) trails Carlos Alcaraz (2), looking to join Tommy Paul (12) in the quarters, with Frances Tiafoe (15) taking on Daniel Altmaier. It's Aryna Sabalenka (1) vs. Zheng Qinwen (8) and Iga Świątek (5) vs. Elina Svitolina (13) in the women's singles last eight after wins today. Watch: TNT, truTV, Tennis Channel, Max (U.S.); TNT (UK) TNT, truTV, Tennis Channel, Max (U.S.); TNT (UK) Join the discussion at: live@ GO FURTHER Tennis on clay courts: The unpredictable dance of sun, rain, wind and brick dust at Roland Garros Connections: Sports Edition Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Getty Images Świątek went on a run of 11 straight points there, and has now won 12 of the last 13. Five games in a row for the defending champion, from 0-2 to 5-2. Four fixtures today. One is yet to be decided, with three match line-ups certain: Taylor Townsend/Evan King (4) vs. Estelle Cascino/Geoffrey Blancaneaux Christian Harrison/Nicole Melichar-Martinez vs. Laura Siegemund/Édouard Roger-Vasselin Robert Galloway/Jiang Xinyu vs. Andrea Vavassori/Sara Errani Getty Images Iga Świątek surfs into a forehand passing shot down the line like she's catching a wave and breaks Rybakina to love. This match has turned on that missed volley from Rybakina and Świątek's feet are squeaking across the clay like only hers can. Rybakina 6-1, 2-4* Świątek All the momentum and confidence seems to have drained out of Elena Rybakina and into Iga Świątek. Four games in a row, two breaks in a row for Świątek, who can now serve to make it 5-2 in the second set! How costly will that missed volley prove to be for the 12th seed? Huge couple of games there, both going Świątek's way. After benefitting from that Rybakina missed volley, the defending champion eventually holds for 3-2 that also saw her serve three double faults when up game point. It really was an extraordinary sequence. But she got through it, and is ahead in a set for the first time today. Getty Images Rybakina 6-1, *2-3 Świątek Thrice Świątek has game point with an advantage, thrice she has double-faulted. She obviously wants to put some pace on her second serves rather than just putting slow balls into Rybakina's side which she will almost certainly smack away, but still. Finally, a good serve at deuce, and she powers the ball away for a winner as if it has insulted her personally. Rybakina now, looking to make that profligacy count, advantage and a mini-fist-pump to her box. Ordinary shot into the net, another deuce. This game going on for 10 minutes or so now! And Rybakina hangs her head as she misses a very makeable backhand into open court to her left, shunting it wide. A big first serve from Świątek, return netted, and that is a big hold for the Pole. Świątek gets the dip. First, a few cheap errors give her a second break point in the fourth game of the set. Rybakina takes control of the point and draws a weak lob from the four-time champion, but it's so weak that Rybakina doesn't look sure of what to do with it and the ball ends up in the net. Huge service game for Świątek now, who needs to consolidate this break. Getty Images Two games all in the second set! At break point Elena Rybakina was in total control of the point, could and probably should have smashed it away at the net to go back to deuce. Then a floaty, loopy return, Rybakina poised for the simple overhand winner. No! She mistimed it horribly, jumping too early, her shot going almost instantly downwards at an acute angle to land in the net. How has she missed that? Świątek break and we are back level. A momentum-shifting point? Rybakina 6-1, 2-1* Świątek Rybakina looks fallible, human, for the first time in this match after a couple of errors. 30-40 and Świątek's first break point opportunity of the entire match (Rybakina has had six). Massive ace and the chance is gone. But the Kazakh nets and another break point... Getty Images Zheng Qinwen (8)'s match with Liudmila Samsonova (19) went to a first-set tiebreak, and the Chinese player took it 7-5. Close match so far. Zheng loves these courts, having won Olympic gold in last summer's Olympic Games. Getty Images Rybakina's level is about as high as it gets right now. Unless she drastically raises her own, Świątek will need her opponent to have a dip to stay in this match. Rybakina 6-1 *2-1 Świątek Rybakina takes the first two games of the set, eight games to one so far in this match, before an important hold for Świątek. The defending champion needs to find something if she wants to triumph in Paris again. Getty Images Following on from Matt, Świątek acknowledged this week that in her humbling defeats in Madrid and Rome to Coco Gauff and Danielle Collins respectively there were times when she stopped running for balls. It happened here in the final game of that first set too, as Rybakina sent yet another backhand fizzing past her. Świątek, who spent some time off the court after the end of the set, needs to lift herself to avoid a first Roland Garros defeat since 2021. Always struck incidentally when seeing Rybakina in person how cleanly she strikes a ball. A joy to watch when she's playing like this. Getty Images When Iga Świątek was knocked out of the Madrid Open by Coco Gauff earlier this month, footwork was the issue. Her defensive footwork and general movement, which is close to peerless and one of her greatest strengths, was absent. It seemed stiff and stilted throughout the afternoon in a way that it rarely does on clay. Usually, she glides across the court with a lethal combination of ease and speed, sliding into shots but never through them, then hustling back into position and jumping on the first chance to end the point. As James just pointed out, not so today either. GO FURTHER Coco Gauff cruises past Iga Swiatek to reach Madrid Open final for first time The hoary cliché says that the eyes are the window to the soul. For Iga Świątek, it's her feet. Elena Rybakina is serving consistently and creating a lot of power behind her second shot, but the most striking sight as she leads the four-time champion 6-1 is that Świątek's feet look stuck in the mud. Her elegant, fluid movement is so foundational to her game that when it's absent, it's very obvious and kind of a disaster. Getty Images Rybakina 6-1 Świątek And she does wrap up the set in double-quick time, 34 minutes and done. Not quite a bagel, but still pretty damning for Świątek. Rybakina led at 40-15, double faulted, then Świątek smashed a return home for deuce. Skidding low shot inches over the net, Świątek nets, then a booming ace. Rybakina *5-1 Świątek Elena Rybakina continues this game like she has all of them in this match so far, dismantling Świątek with a brutal display of relentless and accurate ball-striking. The crowd sing 'Let's go Iga, let's go' but Rybakina goes 15-40 up, two set points. Pulls it wide, 30-40... and then long, deuce! Can Świątek salvage a game? Big ace for advantage, no! The umpire sees it was wide. Another advantage, back to deuce, rinse and repeat and the game is now more than seven minutes long. Świątek swishes her racket in frustration after going long again. But she holds for 5-1. Rybakina still a double break up and serving for the set. Getty Images Rybakina 5-0* Świątek Ouch. Iga Świątek has been firmly second best so far against Elena Rybakina. Rybakina's wonderful hitting power has latched onto any errant shot or slower second serve from the Pole. Five games in a row, five games to love in this first set. Świątek looks unable to come up with any answers right now. Świątek must hold or she will lose the first set, and with a bagel, too. On the men's doubles side, Horacio Zeballos/Marcel Granollers (5) steamrollered American Austin Krajicek and Santiago González 6-2, 6-1, while second seeds Henry Patten/Harri Heliövaara beat Rohan Bopanna/Adam Pavlásek 6-2, 7-6(5). All-U.S. pair Evan King/Christian Harrison are a break up on compatriot Robert Galloway and Yuki Bhambri at 4-3 in the first, with Orlando Luz/Ivan Dodig leading John-Patrick Smith/Fernando Romboli 1-0 on serve in the first.


New York Post
31 minutes ago
- New York Post
Gold watch lost in Lake Michigan shipwreck 165 years ago returns home
When the Lady Elgin sank on Lake Michigan in 1860, British journalist and politician Herbert Ingram was lost to the deep, but 165 years later his pocket watch has returned home. The steamship quickly sank on Sept. 8, 1860, when it collided with a schooner during a storm off Winnetka, Illinois, killing more than 300 people, with many unable to make it to lifeboats before it went down. Advertisement Ingram and his son both died in the sinking with his gold watch going down with them. After the sinking, Ingram's body was recovered, and he was returned to England, and buried in his hometown of Boston in Lincolnshire. The pocket watch was discovered by divers in 1992, but remained in the U.S. until this May, when it was given to a historian to examine. 7 A gold watch belonging to British journalist and politician Herbert Ingram that was lost in the sinking of the Lady Elgin in 1860 has returned to England. FOX 17 WXMI Advertisement 7 The steamship sank on Sept. 8, 1860, after it collided with a schooner during a storm off Winnetka, Illinois, killing more than 300 people. Universal Images Group via Getty Images 7 The pocket watch was discovered by divers in 1992 and was given to a historian to examine last May. FOX 17 WXMI 'Back in 1992, when my team was documenting the remains of the Lady Elgin scattered over more than a mile of lake bottom, other divers were visiting the site,' Valerie Van Heest, co-founder of the Michigan Shipwreck Research Association who wrote 'Lost on the Lady Elgin,' told FOX 17. 'The location had leaked, and a trio of divers I have just recently learned, came upon a pocket watch. A gold pocket watch, an extraordinary discovery.' She added that Ingram was a 'member of Parliament. He was also the founder of the London Illustrated News, which was the first time a newspaper printed images in the paper. So he was really the founder of pictorial journalism.' Advertisement 7 According to Valerie Van Heest, author of 'Lost on the Lady Elgin,' Ingram was a 'member of Parliament. He was also the founder of the London Illustrated News, which was the first time a newspaper printed images in the paper.' Electric Egg Ltd. – 7 Ingram had the watch when he and his son both died in the sinking. FOX 17 WXMI 7 'A trio of divers I have just recently learned, came upon a pocket watch,' Van Heest said. 'A gold pocket watch, an extraordinary discovery.' FOX 17 WXMI Van Heest told BBC News she quickly realized that the watch 'doesn't belong in America. It belongs in Boston, England, where Herbert Ingram was from, where a statue of him still stands.' Advertisement Experts say the watch remained in relatively good condition while on the lake floor because of the lake's cold, low-oxygen environment, according to People magazine. Ingram is celebrated as the 'favorite son' of the Lincolnshire town where he was born and buried and where a statue of him stands. 7 Van Fleet bought the watch and donated it to the Boston Guildhall Museum, which was putting together an exhibit on Ingram at the time. FOX 17 WXMI Van Fleet bought the watch, then donated it to the Boston Guildhall Museum, which happened to be putting together an exhibit on Ingram at the time. 'They didn't have any physical artifacts, and here I was offering not only an artifact, but Herbert Ingram's personal watch,' Van Heest said. 'It was an extraordinary, serendipitous occurrence.' Councilor Sarah Sharpe, from Boston Borough Council told the BBC: 'The fact that this small part of him is coming back to his hometown to be displayed is really special and important.' The museum celebrated the watch's return on May 24, calling it a 'day to remember.' Advertisement 'Today, Boston came together to honour the life and legacy of Herbert Ingram — journalist, reformer, and one of our town's most influential figures — as his long-lost gold watch, recovered from the wreck of the Lady Elgin, was officially returned home,' the museum wrote on Facebook. 'From a private tribute at his grave, to the ceremonial handover at the Ingram Memorial, to the powerful stories shared at Boston Guildhall — every moment was filled with reflection, pride, and awe.' The museum added, 'Thank you to everyone who joined us today — in person and in spirit. Boston history is alive and ticking.'
Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Olympic champion Zheng battles into French Open last eight
Chinese eighth seed Zheng Qinwen secured a place in the French Open quarter-finals with a hard-fought three-set victory over Russian Liudmila Samsonova on Sunday. The reigning Olympic champion extended her winning streak at Roland Garros to 10 matches, winning 7-6 (7/5), 1-6, 6-3 on Court Suzanne Lenglen. Advertisement Zheng said that she does not feel like a defending champion despite winning Olympic gold at the same venue last summer. "It's different because Grand Slam we need to play seven matches, and the Olympic Games is six matches to get a gold medal," she said. "I really don't consider myself as defending champion. Right now even though I'm in (the) quarter-final, I think I'm still a bit far, and I just want to stay calm and fight every single match. "Forget what happened last year, but just fight at this moment in Roland Garros." Zheng will continue her bid for a maiden Grand Slam title against world number one Aryna Sabalenka after she beat Amanda Anisimova. Advertisement The winner of that clash could face three-time defending champion Iga Swiatek in the semi-finals. Zheng is the only woman to beat Swiatek at Roland Garros in the last four years after her semi-final win at the Paris Games. "I feel she's doing amazing here, but you know, for me I will just keep going because, like I said before, I want to stay longer here in Roland Garros," she added. jc/nf