Jack Draper boils over and smashes advertising screen in defeat at Queen’s | Tennis![]() While Jack Draper spent the past week trying to find rhythm and comfort in his first grass tournament of the season, Jiri Lehecka bulldozed everything in his path. After over two furious hours of battle, their form was reflected in the final scoreline as Lehecka toppled a frustrated Draper, the second seed, 6-4, 4-6, 7-5 to reach the biggest final of his career, against Carlos Alcaraz. Draper, who will nonetheless be among the top four seeds at Wimbledon as a result of this run, had been struggling with his game and apparent illness this week and revealed he had been diagnosed with tonsillitis. Draper competed admirably during the tournament, digging deep to find a way through two tough three-set wins over Alexei Popyrin and Brandon Nakashima before putting himself in position to compete for a first grass-court title. He ends with a crushing result. “I’m obviously very gutted,” said Draper. “I gave myself a chance. I could have been out there tomorrow. This is a tournament I have watched since I was young and always really motivated to come here. It hurts a bit more because it’s at home. It isn’t the big one, but every match I lose, I take it really hard.” As Draper’s hopes of competing for his first title on home soil faded in the form of a searing backhand down-the-line winner from Lehecka that secured the decisive break in the third set, his emotions finally boiled over. Draper pounded his racket into the LED screen on the side of the court, temporarily disabling a small rectangular part of the screen. In addition to cracking his racket, Draper grazed his knee. Coincidentally, the screen had been showing an advertisement for Dunlop, his racket sponsor, before it turned black. Draper made no excuses about his tendency to sometimes lose his composure in the heat of battle, but he views it as a part of his intense competitive nature: “When you’re not feeling great, when your energy is really low, you use everything you can to get yourself up,” he said. “I’m almost getting angry to get fired up. When you do that, when you give everything you have, not just in tennis, like in anything, you’re a bit less mellow and playing a bit more on a tightrope. So when you try your best and things don’t go your way, it’s easy to spill over. That’s what happened. “I don’t want to behave like that, but that’s just the way I am as a competitor. Sometimes I just play on a bit of a tightrope. I don’t want to be behaving like that.” Before the semi-finals, Lehecka had been the most impressive performer this week, defeating the fifth seed, Alex de Minaur, in the opening round and then rolling through the rest of the draw. His massive first serve and clean, destructive forehand dominated the first hour of the match. In the decisive final moments deep in the final set, Lehecka outserved Draper and dictated from the baseline. Although Draper fought impressively and served well to turn the match around, he has struggled with his forehand throughout the week meaning once he lost his service rhythm in his final two service games, he was vulnerable. When Draper revealed his tonsillitis diagnosis he said that he had simply been outplayed. after newsletter promotion “Today’s probably the worst I have felt,” said Draper. “Did I think about withdrawing? No, not at all. I’m in the semi-finals at Queen’s. I’d probably go on court with a broken leg. I wouldn’t have pulled out for anything. So I went out there, gave all I had, and I can be very proud of that.” Quick Guide |
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