logo
Draper ready for Wimbledon spotlight as great British hope

Draper ready for Wimbledon spotlight as great British hope

Khaleej Times6 hours ago

For a brief two weeks every year the British public becomes hooked on tennis, desperately seeking a home player to cheer to sporting glory on the fabled lawns of Wimbledon and this year the spotlight falls on Jack Draper.
For decades, it was a cause for hysteria if a British player survived to the second week of the singles.
Then came Tim Henman's multiple journeys to the semi-finals before Andy Murray became a national hero by ending a 77-year wait for a men's champion by winning the title in 2013, before repeating the feat three years later.
Johanna Konta reached the semi-finals in 2017, as did Cameron Norrie in 2022, and Emma Raducanu's astonishing US Open triumph as a qualifier in 2021 means she is now saddled with trying to become the first British player to win the women's title since Virginia Wade in 1977.
Murray is now retired and will have a statue erected in his honour at the All England Club but, right on cue, Draper has stepped into the breach and looks capable of shouldering a nation's hopes on his broad shoulders.
Draper, 23, has won only two matches in three previous visits to Wimbledon. But the past 12 months has seen him evolve from a player regarded as physically fragile to a beast of the courts with the weapons to challenge the very best.
He ended last year ranked 15th in the world after a dream run to the US Open semi-finals, but Draper was clearly hungry to go much higher and after claiming the biggest title of his career at Indian Wells and reaching the final in Madrid, the left-hander will arrive at Wimbledon as the fourth seed.
Blessed with a potent southpaw serve, a thunderbolt forehand some are likening to that of Rafa Nadal's and vastly improved physicality, the hype around the London-born Draper is not without good reason.
"I've got to say he's become extremely formidable," three-times Wimbledon champion John McEnroe told Reuters last month.
"He's a threat to anyone at this point. He's certainly going to be one of the top couple of favourites at Wimbledon and he's going to be extremely difficult to beat."
Soaring expectations
Draper got a taste of the soaring expectations last week at Queen's Club when he reached the semi-finals before losing to dangerous Czech player Jiri Lehecka.
The spotlight will be turned up to maximum intensity when he begins his Wimbledon quest next week as the highest British men's seed since 2017. Draper will be front page news and his every move will be followed by a forest of camera lenses.
Dealing with that pressure could prove as challenging as trying to de-throne Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz.
Draper has spoken in the past of his tendency to over-stress and even vomit on court. A breathing coach has helped immensely with those issues and he looks the real deal, although taking the next step will be daunting.
Murray knows full well what Draper can expect over the next fortnight, but is confident his successor is ready for it.
"It'll be a little bit different this year coming in as a top seed but he'll deal with it well," Murray told the BBC.
"He's played in difficult environments and under pressure before, and I'm sure he'll cope with it well."
Draper seems ready for the challenge.
"I'm going to Wimbledon and I'm going to feel amazing, I'm going to feel great about myself," he said at Queen's.
"I'm going back there in the position I've always wanted since I was a kid."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Draper ready for Wimbledon spotlight as great British hope
Draper ready for Wimbledon spotlight as great British hope

Khaleej Times

time6 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

Draper ready for Wimbledon spotlight as great British hope

For a brief two weeks every year the British public becomes hooked on tennis, desperately seeking a home player to cheer to sporting glory on the fabled lawns of Wimbledon and this year the spotlight falls on Jack Draper. For decades, it was a cause for hysteria if a British player survived to the second week of the singles. Then came Tim Henman's multiple journeys to the semi-finals before Andy Murray became a national hero by ending a 77-year wait for a men's champion by winning the title in 2013, before repeating the feat three years later. Johanna Konta reached the semi-finals in 2017, as did Cameron Norrie in 2022, and Emma Raducanu's astonishing US Open triumph as a qualifier in 2021 means she is now saddled with trying to become the first British player to win the women's title since Virginia Wade in 1977. Murray is now retired and will have a statue erected in his honour at the All England Club but, right on cue, Draper has stepped into the breach and looks capable of shouldering a nation's hopes on his broad shoulders. Draper, 23, has won only two matches in three previous visits to Wimbledon. But the past 12 months has seen him evolve from a player regarded as physically fragile to a beast of the courts with the weapons to challenge the very best. He ended last year ranked 15th in the world after a dream run to the US Open semi-finals, but Draper was clearly hungry to go much higher and after claiming the biggest title of his career at Indian Wells and reaching the final in Madrid, the left-hander will arrive at Wimbledon as the fourth seed. Blessed with a potent southpaw serve, a thunderbolt forehand some are likening to that of Rafa Nadal's and vastly improved physicality, the hype around the London-born Draper is not without good reason. "I've got to say he's become extremely formidable," three-times Wimbledon champion John McEnroe told Reuters last month. "He's a threat to anyone at this point. He's certainly going to be one of the top couple of favourites at Wimbledon and he's going to be extremely difficult to beat." Soaring expectations Draper got a taste of the soaring expectations last week at Queen's Club when he reached the semi-finals before losing to dangerous Czech player Jiri Lehecka. The spotlight will be turned up to maximum intensity when he begins his Wimbledon quest next week as the highest British men's seed since 2017. Draper will be front page news and his every move will be followed by a forest of camera lenses. Dealing with that pressure could prove as challenging as trying to de-throne Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz. Draper has spoken in the past of his tendency to over-stress and even vomit on court. A breathing coach has helped immensely with those issues and he looks the real deal, although taking the next step will be daunting. Murray knows full well what Draper can expect over the next fortnight, but is confident his successor is ready for it. "It'll be a little bit different this year coming in as a top seed but he'll deal with it well," Murray told the BBC. "He's played in difficult environments and under pressure before, and I'm sure he'll cope with it well." Draper seems ready for the challenge. "I'm going to Wimbledon and I'm going to feel amazing, I'm going to feel great about myself," he said at Queen's. "I'm going back there in the position I've always wanted since I was a kid."

Navarro ousts Osaka to set up quarters clash with Pegula at Bad Homburg
Navarro ousts Osaka to set up quarters clash with Pegula at Bad Homburg

Gulf Today

time16 hours ago

  • Gulf Today

Navarro ousts Osaka to set up quarters clash with Pegula at Bad Homburg

Emma Navarro remains a force to be reckoned with at the Bad Homburg. Navarro, the No. 5 seed from the United States, is into her third straight Bad Homburg Open quarterfinal after a clinical 6-4, 6-4 win over former World No. 1 Naomi Osaka. World No. 10 Navarro needed 1 hour and 27 minutes to collect the victory, denying four-time Grand Slam champion Osaka her first Top 10 win since she ousted Jelena Ostapenko. 'I think I played a lot of good tennis,' Navarro said on court, after her win. 'So did she, she made it really tough on me. Definitely there's some things to work on too, so I'll be looking forward to improving for next round.' If she wants to make another semi-final here, Navarro will have to beat her countrywoman and friend, No. 1 seed Jessica Pegula, in the quarter-finals. Pegula won their only previous meeting in straight sets, on the hard courts of Miami last year. Top seed Pegula powered past Czech Katerina Siniakova 6-2 6-3 earlier. Krejcikova survives scare: Wimbledon champion Barbora Krejcikova saved match points for the second successive day against a British opponent to reach the quarter-finals of the Eastbourne WTA 250 event on Wednesday. The 29-year-old Czech was troubled by a thigh strain and looked on the verge of being knocked out by Jodie Burrage when she served at 5-6 in the deciding set and fell 0-40 behind but she somehow turned it around to win 6-4 4-6 7-6(3). There was further disappointment for British fans in the following match at a packed Devonshire Park when Emma Raducanu was beaten 4-6 6-1 7-6(4) by 19-year-old Australian Maya Joint. Second seed Krejcikova, who beat Italy's Jasmine Paolini to win last year's Wimbledon title, seemed in control when leading by a set and a break of serve but needed treatment on her leg. Burrage, ranked 164th in the world, played impressively to hit back though and broke Krejcikova's serve to level the match -- one point being awarded to her after a forehand from her opponent found its way through a hole in the net. The 26-year-old British player kept just ahead in the decider but she could not take any of the three match points that came her way and then a costly double-fault in the tiebreak offered up match points to Krejcikova, who made no mistake. Krejcikova, who also saved match points on Tuesday against home player Harriet Dart, has won two singles matches in a row for the first time in an injury-hit 2025. She will next face French qualifier Varvara Gracheva. Raducanu will be the main home hope for a first British women's champion at Wimbledon since 1977, but she is still struggling for consistency and fitness. The 22-year-old began slowly but hit her stride to take the first set against Joint, but was then largely outplayed. Joint raced through the second set and led 5-2 in the decider before tightening up and allowing Raducanu back. Three times Joint failed to serve out the match but she loosened up enough in the tiebreak to seal a notable victory, bashing down an ace to finish off the duel. She will face Anna Blinkova next after she beat New Zealand's Lulu Sun in straight sets. Meanwhile, Holger Rune has put the mangled rackets that have borne the brunt of his frustration in matches over the years up for sale among a collection of items in his new online store which he hopes will help charitable causes. The world number eight launched the website over the weekend, giving fans the chance to buy items such as books, posters and playing cards, as well as match-worn clothing. While many of the items sold out in a flash, several used rackets were on sale for close to $6,000, while two that were bent and smashed beyond repair during the Dane's rare moments of rage on court were priced at more than $7,000. Agencies

Raducanu, Vondrousova, Cilic and the other unseeded players to avoid at Wimbledon
Raducanu, Vondrousova, Cilic and the other unseeded players to avoid at Wimbledon

The National

time18 hours ago

  • The National

Raducanu, Vondrousova, Cilic and the other unseeded players to avoid at Wimbledon

Wimbledon is fast approaching and there are plenty of burning questions that will be answered when the draw is conducted on Friday morning at the All England Club. Will a sixth-seeded Novak Djokovic avoid landing in Carlos Alcaraz's or Jannik Sinner's quarters of the draw? Will the tennis gods be kind to an eighth-seeded Iga Swiatek as she attempts to find her game on grass? Will two-time champion Petra Kvitova get the farewell she deserves on her farewell appearance at SW19? The Czech lefty came back from a 17-month maternity leave in February and recently announced she will be retiring from tennis after the US Open. Ranked 573 in the world and playing Wimbledon as a wildcard, Kvitova is a name no one will want to draw in the first round, irrespective of her 1-6 record this season. In anticipation of the draw, here are other unseeded threats that could cause some serious damage and an upset or two at the Championships this upcoming fortnight. Marketa Vondrousova As one Czech lefty gets ready to bid farewell to her happiest hunting ground, another one is finding her form at just the right time. The 2023 Wimbledon champion won her first title in two years last week in Berlin by navigating a brutal draw that saw her defeat Australian Open winner Madison Keys, world No 12 Diana Shnaider, two-time Wimbledon finalist Ons Jabeur, and world No 1 Aryna Sabalenka before overcoming Chinese qualifier Wang Xinyu in the final. Vondrousova has spent half of the past 18 months sidelined with injuries and has also had shoulder surgery. She entered Berlin ranked 164 in the world. The 500 points she racked up there have sent her flying 91 spots up the charts, but that's still not high enough to snag her a seeded position at Wimbledon – much to the dismay of the 32 seeds who could end up drawing Vondrousova in the opening round. Her plans between Berlin and Wimbledon? 'I'll just try to enjoy a few days off now and back to hard work. Stay grounded, stay in your lane, focus on tennis and play these matches as if nothing happened,' she told Tatjana Maria Another fairytale that unfolded this grass-court season came courtesy of Tatjana Maria, a 37-year-old mother of two, who reminded us all just how lethal she can be on this surface. A Wimbledon semi-finalist in 2022, Maria claimed the fourth tour-level title of her career, and second on grass, by blasting her way through the main draw at Queen's Club, where women's tennis returned this year for the first time since 1973. After beating Canada's Leylah Fernandez in her opener, Maria knocked out four top-15 players, including Grand Slam champions Keys and Elena Rybakina. No one will want to see the German's name next to theirs when the draw is revealed on Friday. Emma Raducanu Before she stunned the world by winning the US Open as a qualifier back in 2021, Emma Raducanu's first tour-level breakthrough came at Wimbledon two months earlier. Ranked 338 at the time, the then 18-year-old claimed three main-draw wins to become the youngest British woman in the Open Era to reach the last 16 at Wimbledon. Raducanu has made the fourth round at the Championships twice in three appearances, and her warm-up for this year's edition included a quarter-final run at Queen's earlier this month. The 22-year-old is up to 38 in the world rankings, making her one of the highest-ranked non-seeds in the draw. With the home crowd behind her and her confidence rising, Raducanu will be a tricky first-round opponent. Marin Cilic This time last year, Marin Cilic was ranked outside the top 1,000 and in the midst of a six-month injury layoff that included surgery on his right knee. The 2014 US Open champion returned to action in late August and was crowned champion in just his third tournament back, clinching the ATP 250 event in Hangzhou, China last September. Cilic, a former world No 3, arrives at this year's Wimbledon ranked 85 in the world and is coming off a grass-court title run at the Challenger Tour event in Nottingham. The 36-year-old Croatian has historically been one of the tour's best grass-court players. He won three tour-level titles on the surface – twice at Queen's and once in Stuttgart – and reached the final at Wimbledon in 2017, where he suffered from a painful foot blister during a straight-sets defeat to Roger Federer. He has a 80-32 win-loss record at tour-level on grass; his 71.4% success rate on the surface is the fourth-best among active ATP players. Injuries have kept Cilic away from the All England Club since 2021, and he will no doubt want to make the most of his return to SW19. Cilic's final warm-up for Wimbledon will be the Giorgio Armani Tennis Classic exhibition event at London's Hurlingham Club alongside the likes of Novak Djokovic and Lorenzo Musetti. Roberto Bautista Agut The Spaniard has made it into the second week of Wimbledon in five of his 10 Wimbledon appearances, amassing an impressive 71% win percentage at the All England Club. His reached the semi-finals in 2019, his best performance at a Grand Slam to date, losing to Djokovic in four sets. At 37, the former world No 9 is still a tough nut to crack on grass – his semi-final run at Queen's is testament to that – securing wins over world No 9 Holger Rune and No 17 Jakub Mensik before falling to eventual champion Alcaraz. He's back up to 43 in the rankings and will be high on confidence when Wimbledon kicks off on Monday. Gabriel Diallo Canada's big-serving Gabriel Diallo is enjoying a breakthrough 2025, highlighted by a maiden ATP title on the lawns of 's-Hertogenbosch earlier this month. Diallo was competing for the first time at tour-level on grass that week but was unfazed by the challenge as he utilised his powerful game to full effect on the surface to lift his first ATP trophy. A march to the quarter-finals at the Masters 1000 tournament in Madrid in May – as a lucky loser – showed how dangerous Diallo can be in fast conditions. The 23-year-old is among the top 20 on the tour's aces leaderboard for this season and has more than halved his ranking this campaign, reaching a current career-high of 41. He'll be making his first Wimbledon main draw appearance next week and is a potential banana skin for many top players.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store