logo
Jack Draper begins bid to emulate Andy Murray at Queen's Club with opening win

Jack Draper begins bid to emulate Andy Murray at Queen's Club with opening win

Glasgow Times6 hours ago

The British number one, seeded second at this year's HSBC Championships, is attempting to become only the second home men's singles winner in the Open era after Murray.
Draper got his grass-court season off to a solid start on the Andy Murray Arena with a 6-3 6-1 win over American Jenson Brooksby, before poking fun at his mentor, who retired last year.
'Can't get rid of this guy,' he joked. 'Andy is an unbelievable guy, someone I'm very inspired by and I wouldn't be where I am without him.
'I definitely miss him on the Tour. Thank you Andy, this court deserves to be named after you.'
Draper narrowly avoided injuring himself when he chased down an overhead into the advertising hoardings on his first set point, but he dispatched the second with a clubbing forehand.
The 23-year-old then fired down an eighth ace of the contest on his first match point before celebrating a dominant win and writing 'good to be home' on a camera lens.
Draper, who will face Australian world number 21 Alexei Popyrin in the second round, revealed he suffered an injury scare ahead of the tournament after falling on the Queen's practice court.
Draper (pictured) will face Australian Alexei Popyrin in the second round (Ben Whitley/PA)
'I feel good. I feel good now,' he added. 'Last week in training I had a little niggle. I had to have a break for a couple of days to see it through.
'I was training on the courts here and took a really heavy fall. I was limping around for a day or so, but it wasn't anything that was going to keep me from playing.'
Top seed Carlos Alcaraz, playing his first match since his epic five-set triumph over Jannik Sinner in the French Open final nine days earlier, eased past Adam Walton 6-4 7-6 (4).
Alcaraz was supposed to take on fellow Spaniard Alejandro Davidovich Fokina but the 26-year-old, who got married at the weekend, withdrew through illness on Tuesday morning.
The 2023 Queen's champion had been enjoying his own celebrations, jetting off to party island Ibiza following his Roland Garros success.
The 22-year-old may have still been feeling the effects as he was not at his sharpest, but he still saw off Australian lucky loser Walton to extend his winning streak to 14 matches.
He said: 'I had some days off and I made the most of it. To reset my mind a bit, to rest up. Then my mind is straight here.
'After the French Open, it's just a week to switch to grass so I don't have too much time. I would've liked to have more time to relax after the French. I've had a few days back home and a few days to get back here.'
Sinner, playing in his first match since blowing those three Championship points in Paris, beat Germany's Yannick Hanfmann 7-5 6-3 to reach the last 16 in Halle.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lions enjoy rare status as heavy favourites as Australia fight for credibility
Lions enjoy rare status as heavy favourites as Australia fight for credibility

The Herald Scotland

time35 minutes ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Lions enjoy rare status as heavy favourites as Australia fight for credibility

'There's no hiding from the fact that it's important for the Lions to win this time,' Gatland said after the opener in Brisbane had been clinched 23-21. The Lions went on to topple the Wallabies 2-1 and it remains their only success of the last six tours, although a drawn series in New Zealand four years later and narrow loss to South Africa in 2021 proved they can be competitive against reigning world champions. This time they are in the rare position of leaving these shores as heavy favourites to dispatch adversaries who have sunk to eighth in the global rankings – beneath Ireland, England and Scotland – and who are fighting for their credibility as future Lions opponents. A disastrous second spell under Eddie Jones that culminated in failure to qualify for the knockout phase of a World Cup for the first time in 2023 confirmed their new status as fallen giants. Amid growing interest – at least among supporters – in exploring the idea of tours to new destinations such as Argentina or France, the Wallabies must justify their place in the Lions' 12-year cycle. The odds are stacked against them in a series that spans Tests in Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney, but there are reasons why they might yet avenge 2013. Joe Schmidt is in charge of Australia (David Davies/PA). Chief among them is Joe Schmidt, their master coach whose tactical insight is matched by an intimate knowledge of many of the Lions' players and management – including boss Andy Farrell – having been in charge of Ireland from 2013-19. Australia's teams have performed solidly in Super Rugby Pacific this year and Schmidt will field a dangerous starting XV, including cross-code superstar Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, who is expected to recover from a broken jaw in time to play in the Tests. Home advantage is less of a factor because of the hordes of travelling fans, but the Wallabies will be more accustomed to the dry conditions, even if the Lions will have played five games Down Under by the time the series arrives. 'If you're an Australian player in top form, surely this is the biggest thing in your career,' said Farrell, the tourists' head coach. 'Knowing Australia's coaching ticket, but also the athletes and ability they have in their squad, they will keep growing to a point that it will be as tough a series as we have ever faced. They'll be ready for a fight.' Farrell's challenge is ensuring the combined might of four nations that should make the series an unfair fight adds up to at least the sum of their parts, a task that has eluded many of his predecessors. The Ireland boss has six fixtures, starting with Friday's Dublin curtain raiser against Argentina, to shape his team ahead of the first Test. With history showing successful tours are the exception rather than the rule, nothing is guaranteed even for a Lions side that are expected to come out on top.

Lions enjoy rare status as heavy favourites as Australia fight for credibility
Lions enjoy rare status as heavy favourites as Australia fight for credibility

Rhyl Journal

time39 minutes ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Lions enjoy rare status as heavy favourites as Australia fight for credibility

Warren Gatland's team headed Down Under 12 years ago in pursuit of a first series triumph since 1997 and, having lost seven out of nine Tests thereafter, the future of the entire concept was at stake. 'There's no hiding from the fact that it's important for the Lions to win this time,' Gatland said after the opener in Brisbane had been clinched 23-21. An epic fixture schedule locked in! 🔒🦁#Lions2025 #WeGoBeyond — British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) June 5, 2025 The Lions went on to topple the Wallabies 2-1 and it remains their only success of the last six tours, although a drawn series in New Zealand four years later and narrow loss to South Africa in 2021 proved they can be competitive against reigning world champions. This time they are in the rare position of leaving these shores as heavy favourites to dispatch adversaries who have sunk to eighth in the global rankings – beneath Ireland, England and Scotland – and who are fighting for their credibility as future Lions opponents. A disastrous second spell under Eddie Jones that culminated in failure to qualify for the knockout phase of a World Cup for the first time in 2023 confirmed their new status as fallen giants. Amid growing interest – at least among supporters – in exploring the idea of tours to new destinations such as Argentina or France, the Wallabies must justify their place in the Lions' 12-year cycle. The odds are stacked against them in a series that spans Tests in Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney, but there are reasons why they might yet avenge 2013. Chief among them is Joe Schmidt, their master coach whose tactical insight is matched by an intimate knowledge of many of the Lions' players and management – including boss Andy Farrell – having been in charge of Ireland from 2013-19. Australia's teams have performed solidly in Super Rugby Pacific this year and Schmidt will field a dangerous starting XV, including cross-code superstar Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, who is expected to recover from a broken jaw in time to play in the Tests. Home advantage is less of a factor because of the hordes of travelling fans, but the Wallabies will be more accustomed to the dry conditions, even if the Lions will have played five games Down Under by the time the series arrives. 'If you're an Australian player in top form, surely this is the biggest thing in your career,' said Farrell, the tourists' head coach. 'Knowing Australia's coaching ticket, but also the athletes and ability they have in their squad, they will keep growing to a point that it will be as tough a series as we have ever faced. They'll be ready for a fight.' Farrell's challenge is ensuring the combined might of four nations that should make the series an unfair fight adds up to at least the sum of their parts, a task that has eluded many of his predecessors. The Ireland boss has six fixtures, starting with Friday's Dublin curtain raiser against Argentina, to shape his team ahead of the first Test. With history showing successful tours are the exception rather than the rule, nothing is guaranteed even for a Lions side that are expected to come out on top.

Lions enjoy rare status as heavy favourites as Australia fight for credibility
Lions enjoy rare status as heavy favourites as Australia fight for credibility

Leader Live

time40 minutes ago

  • Leader Live

Lions enjoy rare status as heavy favourites as Australia fight for credibility

Warren Gatland's team headed Down Under 12 years ago in pursuit of a first series triumph since 1997 and, having lost seven out of nine Tests thereafter, the future of the entire concept was at stake. 'There's no hiding from the fact that it's important for the Lions to win this time,' Gatland said after the opener in Brisbane had been clinched 23-21. An epic fixture schedule locked in! 🔒🦁#Lions2025 #WeGoBeyond — British & Irish Lions (@lionsofficial) June 5, 2025 The Lions went on to topple the Wallabies 2-1 and it remains their only success of the last six tours, although a drawn series in New Zealand four years later and narrow loss to South Africa in 2021 proved they can be competitive against reigning world champions. This time they are in the rare position of leaving these shores as heavy favourites to dispatch adversaries who have sunk to eighth in the global rankings – beneath Ireland, England and Scotland – and who are fighting for their credibility as future Lions opponents. A disastrous second spell under Eddie Jones that culminated in failure to qualify for the knockout phase of a World Cup for the first time in 2023 confirmed their new status as fallen giants. Amid growing interest – at least among supporters – in exploring the idea of tours to new destinations such as Argentina or France, the Wallabies must justify their place in the Lions' 12-year cycle. The odds are stacked against them in a series that spans Tests in Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney, but there are reasons why they might yet avenge 2013. Chief among them is Joe Schmidt, their master coach whose tactical insight is matched by an intimate knowledge of many of the Lions' players and management – including boss Andy Farrell – having been in charge of Ireland from 2013-19. Australia's teams have performed solidly in Super Rugby Pacific this year and Schmidt will field a dangerous starting XV, including cross-code superstar Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, who is expected to recover from a broken jaw in time to play in the Tests. Home advantage is less of a factor because of the hordes of travelling fans, but the Wallabies will be more accustomed to the dry conditions, even if the Lions will have played five games Down Under by the time the series arrives. 'If you're an Australian player in top form, surely this is the biggest thing in your career,' said Farrell, the tourists' head coach. 'Knowing Australia's coaching ticket, but also the athletes and ability they have in their squad, they will keep growing to a point that it will be as tough a series as we have ever faced. They'll be ready for a fight.' Farrell's challenge is ensuring the combined might of four nations that should make the series an unfair fight adds up to at least the sum of their parts, a task that has eluded many of his predecessors. The Ireland boss has six fixtures, starting with Friday's Dublin curtain raiser against Argentina, to shape his team ahead of the first Test. With history showing successful tours are the exception rather than the rule, nothing is guaranteed even for a Lions side that are expected to come out on top.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store