
‘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 five 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.'
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.
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.
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. 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.
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.
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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South Wales Guardian
14 minutes ago
- South Wales Guardian
Jack Draper knows it will take time to catch Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz
Draper, 23, missed out on the chance to face world number one Sinner at the French Open after slipping to a fourth-round defeat to Alexander Bublik. The British number one is now up to fourth in the live ATP rankings, behind only Sinner, Alcaraz and Alexander Zverev. But the injuries Draper suffered early in his career means he is lagging behind in terms of experience; the Bublik defeat was his 162nd Tour-level match while 22-year-old Alcaraz has played more than 300 and Sinner, only a few months older than Draper, has played over 350. 'I still think I'm a long way behind those boys. I still have lots to learn,' he said. 'If you look at the ATP matches, how many matches they've played, they've probably played double the amount that I've played. 'They're probably a year, two years ahead of me and obviously achieved a lot more, a lot more experience. I do have a lot to do to catch up with them, in all honesty. 'My level is getting better all the time, but it's not just the tennis. It's the consistency of what they're doing. Even though I've been more consistent, it's doing it when it matters, and these are the tournaments that it matters. 'I have a lot to go still to get to them, and I think that I'm working hard, I'm doing the right things, and we'll see.' Nevertheless, Draper can look back at a successful clay season – having reached a final in Madrid and won matches for the first time at Roland Garros – before he heads for the green, green grass of home. 'I'm going to be very happy to get off the clay. You know, that's just a fact,' he added. 'I'm really, really proud of my ability to have adapted and to accept the challenge of being on the clay. 'Week-to-week I've really built, and I've learned a lot, and I've got better. I've come here, won three matches, made fourth round despite not probably playing the best tennis that I was playing in Madrid and Rome. 'I'll be happy to get on a faster surface, a surface that I'm much more comfortable moving on. Yeah, I look forward to being back home, being on the grass, for sure.'

Leader Live
14 minutes ago
- Leader Live
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Draper, 23, missed out on the chance to face world number one Sinner at the French Open after slipping to a fourth-round defeat to Alexander Bublik. The British number one is now up to fourth in the live ATP rankings, behind only Sinner, Alcaraz and Alexander Zverev. But the injuries Draper suffered early in his career means he is lagging behind in terms of experience; the Bublik defeat was his 162nd Tour-level match while 22-year-old Alcaraz has played more than 300 and Sinner, only a few months older than Draper, has played over 350. 'I still think I'm a long way behind those boys. I still have lots to learn,' he said. 'If you look at the ATP matches, how many matches they've played, they've probably played double the amount that I've played. 'They're probably a year, two years ahead of me and obviously achieved a lot more, a lot more experience. I do have a lot to do to catch up with them, in all honesty. 'My level is getting better all the time, but it's not just the tennis. It's the consistency of what they're doing. Even though I've been more consistent, it's doing it when it matters, and these are the tournaments that it matters. 'I have a lot to go still to get to them, and I think that I'm working hard, I'm doing the right things, and we'll see.' Nevertheless, Draper can look back at a successful clay season – having reached a final in Madrid and won matches for the first time at Roland Garros – before he heads for the green, green grass of home. 'I'm going to be very happy to get off the clay. You know, that's just a fact,' he added. 'I'm really, really proud of my ability to have adapted and to accept the challenge of being on the clay. 'Week-to-week I've really built, and I've learned a lot, and I've got better. I've come here, won three matches, made fourth round despite not probably playing the best tennis that I was playing in Madrid and Rome. 'I'll be happy to get on a faster surface, a surface that I'm much more comfortable moving on. Yeah, I look forward to being back home, being on the grass, for sure.'


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
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