
Jack Draper seals huge Wimbledon boost after Queen's quarter-final victory
On one level, it is mission accomplished for Jack Draper at Queen's Club this week. Of course, there is still at tournament to win, a prestigious tournament at that, especially for a British player. Rather tantalisingly, Draper remains on an collision course with world No 2 Carlos Alcaraz in the final on Sunday.
But around these parts, there is always one eye firmly set on the big grass court dance, five miles south, in ten days' time.
The surprise first-round exit of current world No 4 Taylor Fritz this week and the non-activity of No 5 Novak Djokovic, handed No 6 Draper a golden opportunity to seal a top-four seeding for Wimbledon. With that comes an easier quarter-final at SW19 – by ranking, avoiding the likes of Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner until the semis – should he get there.
And with a patchy if not convincing 6-4, 5-7, 6-4 quarter-final victory against Brandon Nakashima on Friday, Draper has secured the points he needs to return to the world No 4 spot on Monday. The boy from Putney will be the fourth seed at the All England Club; quite the rise from No 28 last year.
Tennis players tend not to worry too much about the potential pathways and ramifications. Much like the age-old footballer saying, it's simply 'focus on the next game.' And given Draper has never gone beyond the second round at his home Slam, that will remain the case come the first week of the Wimbledon fortnight.
But it's unquestionably an advantage if, like us in the media and fans of the sport, you like to glance a little further forward.
Of immediate concern, though, will be the big-serving game of Jiri Lehecka – who defeated British No 2 Jacob Fearnley earlier in the day – in the HSBC Championships semi-finals on Saturday. The second seed this week at Queen's, Draper is now just a match away from setting up an intriguing Sunday showpiece against Alcaraz, who he beat here last year.
On a stifling but overcast afternoon in west London, Draper came out all guns blazing against fellow 23-year-old Nakashima, ranked 32 in the world, who he beat on route to his first tour title on the grass of Stuttgart last year.
The Brit broke in the third game, courtesy of a shanked Nakashima forehand into the crowd, and staved off six break back opportunities for the American in a tight first-set, with Draper's form ebbing and flowing sporadically.
A key trait of any top player, however, is to convert when playing under-par and Draper, despite a curious overuse of the drop-shot against the speedy Nakashima, sealed the opener in overcast conditions with an ace.
The second set was tighter still. The cool-headed, unflappable Nakashima had more opportunities against serve, before Draper found his mark with aplomb under pressure.
Yet just a game away from a tiebreak, the Brit's forehand went mysteriously astray and Nakashima, to the sound of groans on the Andy Murray Arena, claimed the second as Draper went long on the backhand wing.
Nakashima's notable robustness in the rallies – no point was given up cheaply – seemed to be sapping the life out of Draper, two days on from his final-set tie-break win against Alexei Popyrin. But at 3-3, suddenly, a second wind.
Draper's returns had a smidge more oomph, his body language picked up and Nakashima could not reacclimatise quick enough. Draper's first break point chance flew agonisingly wide by a few millimetres but his second was clinched brilliantly, via a trademark forehand thump down the line.
Serving for the match, Draper saved two break points – one with a forehand plum on the line – and roared to the crowd for encouragement, and eventually sealed a hard-fought victory with a volley at the net. The relief on his face was clear as day.
It is a testament to Draper's newfound equanimity that his game – and perhaps more pertinently, his mind – hit the mark needed once more at the end of the match. It is the sort of asset which is swinging sets, and matches, in his favour. And it very much makes Draper, the fourth-best player in the world, a bona fide threat on the grass.

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The Guardian
25 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Jack Draper holds nerve and earns Wimbledon seedings boost in making Queen's Club semi-finals
Jack Draper is a perfectionist in every sense of the word, which means that for the third consecutive match he departed the court quite unimpressed by the level of tennis he demonstrated. There were, after all, quite a few self-sabotaging concentration lapses, his forehand was too erratic and he did not always seem comfortable moving on the slick grass. In the most important moments, however, when the match hung in the balance, the 23-year-old locked in and produced his best tennis. Once again, the British No 1 held his nerve in the final stages of a tough three-setter as he defeated Brandon Nakashima 6-4, 5-7, 6-4 to reach the semi-finals at Queen's Club for the first time in his career. The victory means Draper will return to his career-high ranking of No 4 on Monday, securing him a top-four seeding at Wimbledon. At a time when almost every player wishes to avoid an early meeting with Carlos Alcaraz or Jannik Sinner, he cannot face either of the world's top two before the semi-finals. However, a meeting with Alcaraz here remains on the cards. One day after his own dramatic three-set win, as he recovered from 2-4 in the final set to defeat Jaume Munar in a three hour, 26 minute marathon, Alcaraz, the top seed, returned to the semi-finals at Queen's Club with a 7-5, 6-4 win against Arthur Rinderknech. Alcaraz has won 16 consecutive matches, the longest winning streak of his career. Afterwards, Alcaraz stressed how difficult it was to recover less than 24 hours after such a tough match. 'Could be better, honestly, but I thought I was going to feel much worse than I feel right now,' the world No 2 said. 'But we are tennis players, we have to do whatever we have to do just to recover, to be in good shape the next day. I'm just feeling great. I'm glad that today was one hour, 20 minutes. Today was more grass [than clay], so I'm just happy and hopefully tomorrow I'm going to feel much better.' For Draper the past few days have, in some ways, emphasised just how much things have changed over the past year. Although he has broken new ground this week by reaching a first semi-final at Queen's Club, he still feels some way from producing his best. 'The level of what I'm playing could be more consistent, definitely better,' he said. 'I think it will come. The more I practise, the more I play, I'm getting a little bit better each time. I don't know when it will come together, but still doing well to be in the semis. Day by day, we'll see. While he has previously been able to produce his best level from the beginning of the grass season, Draper is still finding his feet after enduring his first full clay-court season and the significant efforts it took for him to adapt his game to suit a completely different surface. 'It's just such a hard adjustment,' said Draper. 'I really tried on the clay to play a certain way, to be aggressive in the back court, to be tough from the back of the court, and I spent probably like a month and a half on the clay. This is still [early] because I didn't practise too much before the tournament with certain things. I'm sort of going by ear out there a little bit, and I'm trying to become more and more comfortable on the grass. When you get more comfortable in the movement, more comfortable in what you're trying to do out there, it just starts clicking.' During the decisive moments, though, the confidence that Draper has gained over the past few years has been plain for all to see and every match affords him the opportunity to further improve his level on grass as he attempts to peak in time for Wimbledon. Draper will next face the talented Czech Jiri Lehecka, who ended the excellent run of the British No 2, Jacob Fearnley, with a 7-5, 6-2 win. Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion Elsewhere, the world No 1, Jannik Sinner, released his first music single, Polvere e Gloria (Dust and Glory), with the famous Italian vocalist Andrea Bocelli. Alongside Bocelli's singing, Sinner reiterates parts of his past speeches during trophy ceremonies. On Thursday, the same day the song was announced, Sinner suffered his first defeat to a player ranked outside the top 20 in nearly two years, losing in three sets to Alexander Bublik in the second round of the Halle Open. In Nottingham Katie Boulter's bid for a hat-trick of titles came to an end as she was beaten 6-3, 3-6, 6-4 by McCartney Kessler. The British No 2 and eighth seed secured a service break early in the deciding set but the American stormed back to reach the semi-finals.


The Guardian
27 minutes ago
- The Guardian
India's Shubman Gill and Yashasvi Jaiswal make tons to leave England toiling in first Test
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BBC News
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