Jack Draper: British No 1 battles past Alexei Popyrin to reach quarter-finals at Queen’s Club | Tennis News

Jack Draper was given a stern test of his grasscourt title credentials with a tough three-set victory against Alexei Popyrin on a baking hot day at Queen’s Club.

The second seed at the ATP 500 event in west London lost the opening set before digging deep to seal a 3-6 6-2 7-6 (7-5) success on the Andy Murray Arena.

The 23-year-old dropped the opening set to tricky Australian world No 21 Popyrin, but gathered himself to level the match.

He then came through a deciding-set tie-break to win a gruelling contest in two hours and 13 minutes.

British players who have reached 3+ Queen’s QFs in Open Era

Tim Henman (7)

Andy Murray (6)

Greg Rusedski (3)

Jack Draper (3)

If Draper breaks new ground and reaches a maiden semi-final in west London, he will be seeded fourth at Wimbledon.

“It was a tough match, credit to Alexei, he played some amazing tennis,” said Draper, who could next face an all-British showdown against Dan Evans, ranked world No 199, at the HSBC Championships.

“My family is here and my friends are here and I love being at home, playing in front of family and friends. It is an emotional moment for me.

“In the first couple of sets it wasn’t pretty at all, I need time to adjust to the grass but it’s one more under the belt.”

Draper forced two break points in the seventh game of the first set, but two 130mph aces got Popyrin out of trouble.

The Briton then lost concentration momentarily and before he knew it, Popyrin had three break points.

The set quickly disappeared, although play was briefly held up when a bizarre gust of wind engulfed the Andy Murray Arena, sending a spectator’s hat flying into Popyrin and large bits of felt from the barriers swirling on to the court.

However, it was Draper who got a second wind with a double break to draw level.

His serving got him in trouble and back out of it after a double-fault gave Popyrin a break point at the start of the decider, with a big serve and then an ace clinching a vital hold.

Popyrin clung on valiantly, saving two match points as he served at 4-5, and in the tie-break he led 4-2.

But Draper stepped on the gas to win five of the last six points, finishing the job with an ace.

‘Draper looks like he wants to play fearless tennis’

Sky Sports commentator, Jonathan Overend, reflected on Draper’s win, saying: “Grass-court tennis rewards the fearless and Draper, for me, looks like he wants to play fearless tennis on return and that could be so crucial come Wimbledon time.

“With return, there’s a more stark difference if you say Novak Djokovic is the best returner and he’s 10 out of 10, well the fiftieth best returner in the world is more like a six out of 10, rather than an eight out of 10 for the serve, so there is a huge difference there.

“It means there are fewer guys who are able to make the change, make the impact on those big moments on grass and I think Draper is absolutely one of those guys who can do that.”

Discussing the third-set tie-break, Overend added: “I make the point about seizing the moment, Draper had one more turn late in the tie-break to try to get over the line, so he goes to his bag and changes his racket.

“I assume he went for a tighter string tension to get a bit more control on the next return because he knows he has to hit a defensive return because Popyrin is serving big but he wants more control because the last one drifted long. But this one stays in and he’s able to get that point.

“It was clever and astute, sort of quick thinking, which is going to be required in those big moments at Wimbledon.”

Spain's Carlos Alcaraz reacts after beating Australia's Adam Walton during their men's singles match at the Queen's Club grass court tennis
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Carlos Alcaraz is back in action on Thursday at Queen’s Club

Earlier, Roberto Bautista Agut defeated Czech Jakub Mensik 3-6 6-3 7-5 to reach the quarter-finals for the first time since his previous appearance here in 2016.

Top seed Carlos Alcaraz, the 2023 champion, is back in action against fellow Spaniard Jaume Munar on Thursday.

Watch the ATP and WTA Tours, as well as the US Open in New York, live on Sky Sports in 2025 or stream with NOW and the Sky Sports app, giving Sky Sports customers access to over 50 per cent more live sport this year at no extra cost. Find out more here.

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