The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Draper rides British wave at Eastbourne

Second-best win of career seals place in quarter-final Norrie and Dart also in last eight as Wimbledon awaits

- By Molly Mcelwee

Young British talent Jack Draper reached the second tour-level quarter-final of his career and capped it off with an unwelcome present from a seagull at Eastbourne.

Draper’s 7-5, 7-6 win over world No15 Diego Schwartzma­n was the second-best of his career based on ranking, and saw him reach the last eight on another busy day for the British contingent at Eastbourne. But as he reflected on his victory during a post-match interview at courtside, bird droppings splattered onto his wrist. “I’ve just been pooed on by a bird,” he said, laughing. “Is that good luck?”

It is no wonder Draper, 20, could see the positives. Ranked just outside the top 100, he has been notching up some decent results on the grass, punching well above his weight. Draper reached the last-16 at Queen’s, after beating Indian Wells champion Taylor Fritz, and his latest upset over Schwartzma­n was just as impressive.

After suffering from a few nerves while serving for the match, Draper recovered to play a clinical tie-break to seal the win. He said his recent progress is partly due to muting the fiery side of his character, which was prone to boiling over during his junior career.

“When I was a junior and just starting in the pros I was very up and down with my emotions,” he said. “I’d be on a bit of a roller coaster and therefore it’s tougher to stay in the moment. As you go up the levels playing against someone like Diego, these top players, they don’t give you those second chances. So it’s got to be up to me to make the difference.

“I want to be a top player in the world so I know I’m going to have to deal with all these emotions and pressures. But I feel like the only pressure I can put on myself is in my own head. So as long as I keep doing the right things and improving then that’s all I can do.”

There was a double victory for compatriot Harriet Dart, who made it two wins in one day to reach the last eight. Dart’s second-round match against Switzerlan­d’s Jil Teichmann had been suspended on Tuesday due to poor light, and so she was forced to see out the decider yesterday morning, before then jumping back on the court to face Ukraine’s Marta Kostyuk in the next round.

It turned into quite a battle, but Dart saw it out 6-4, 2-6, 6-4. It was another impressive win for the 25-year-old, who is ranked 103rd in the world and also reached the quarter-finals at the Nottingham Open earlier this month. She now faces former Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova, who ousted Briton Katie Boulter.

It was a mixed day for the home talent. Jodie Burrage bowed out after a valiant run to the last-16 in which she beat world No3 Paula Badosa. She was well beaten by the most in-form grass player of the moment, Brazil’s Beatriz Haddad Maia, who is on a 12-match winning streak. Dan Evans lost to American Maxime Cressy in straight sets, who will face British No1 Cameron Norrie in the last eight.

Norrie received a bye to the last16, so finally scored his first win on grass this year with a dominant display against American Brandon Nakashima yesterday. Ryan Peniston’s match was suspended due to poor light in the deciding set against Pedro Martinez.

This past week in Eastbourne has

been one of the most successful for Britons in recent memory, as seven reached the last 16 across the men’s and women’s singles. After the two biggest names in British tennis, Andy Murray and Emma Raducanu, had to skip competitiv­e play this week due to respective abdominal injuries, the rest of the pack rose to the challenge and it bodes well for their chances on the grass at Wimbledon next week.

The British success in Eastbourne has been upstaged only by 23-time major champion Serena Williams making her long-awaited comeback to competitiv­e tennis. She secured her second win of the week to reach the doubles semi-finals at Devonshire Park with partner Ons Jabeur.

She and Jabeur looked much more in sync than they had in the first round, and sealed a straightfo­rward 6-2, 6-4 win over doubles specialist­s Shuko Aoyama of Japan and Taiwan’s Chan Hao-ching. They face Magda Linette and Aleksandra Krunic next.

 ?? ?? Marked: Jack Draper is targeted by a seagull while giving a TV interview at Eastbourne
Marked: Jack Draper is targeted by a seagull while giving a TV interview at Eastbourne

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