Draper survives dramatic Moutet tussle to reach Italian Open quarter-final

A picture


Forty minutes into his dramatic, anxiety-filled fourth‑round tussle with Corentin Moutet in Rome, Jack Draper still had just one game to his name.In the face of one of the most cunning, varied players on the tour, he was completely disconcerted.He did not know what to do.Draper spent almost the entirety of the short break between sets shouting encouragement at himself.Draper responded to the adversity with an exhibition of his growing mental strength and inner belief as he found a way into the quarter-finals with a 1-6, 6-4, 6-3 win.

“I knew that I had to change a few things tactically,” Draper, the fifth seed in Rome, said,“I had to be there for every point, because his level wasn’t going to drop,I knew that,So I’m really, really happy with the way I problem-solved,”Three weeks ago, Draper’s best result on clay was two ATP 250 quarter-finals.

He has now won eight of his past nine matches on the surface and reached consecutive Masters 1000 quarter-finals on clay following his run to the Madrid Open final.He is not merely playing like an elite player at certain times, he is now doing so consistently on all surfaces.Draper faces the reigning French Open champion and third seed Carlos Alcaraz on Wednesday, in another edition of what is becoming one of the tour’s most significant rivalries.“We’re both in the top five in the world now, but I see it as just two guys who are playing great tennis going out there and wanting to win and beat each other and be competitive,” Draper said.“I have big respect for him.

I know what he’s going to bring.He’s going to be really tough to beat.Obviously there is a bit of a change in dynamic, but I feel strong and I feel good about the match.I hope that I can bring some really good tennis.”Jannik Sinner passed a big test in his return from a three-month doping ban, beating the accomplished clay-court player Francisco Cerundolo 7-6(2), 6-3 on Tuesday to reach the Italian Open quarter-finals.

The 18th-ranked Cerundolo has a tour-best 18 wins on clay this year and was coming off a run to the Madrid Open semi-finals.Also, Cerundolo beat Sinner when they last met on the same court — and in the same round — two years ago.It is Sinner’s first tournament since he won his third Grand Slam title at the Australian Open in January and he hasn't dropped a set in three matches.“Today I felt that I raised my level,” Sinner said.“It was a very long day … but I need this.

I’m happy to be back.I was three months out, so every situation for me, I feel very fortunate to be here, very lucky." Associated PressAfter being forced to withdraw from the Miami Open because of an adductor injury, Alcaraz is still finding his form in Rome, the only significant clay court title he is yet to win.He edged past Karen Khachanov 6-3, 3-6, 7-5.Although Alcaraz leads their head-to head 3-2, Draper triumphed in their last meeting, winning in three sets en route to the Indian Wells title in March.

Their last match was very much on Alcaraz’s mind as he looked ahead: “I’m just ready,” he said,“I’m just looking forward to playing against him,He’s one of the best players in the world right now,The results show how good he is playing lately,I just want to take revenge from Indian Wells.

”Fresh off a spectacular upset win against the ninth seed Holger Rune, Moutet is well known for his varied, crafty, lefty game and his extroverted personality on court.He is a tricky opponent for all players, particularly those still finding their feet on clay, such as Draper.From the beginning, Moutet made use of every tool at his disposal, mixing in serve and volley attempts to great effect while dragging Draper to all parts of the court with a variety of spins, slices and drop shots.As Moutet soared, his British opponent retreated into his shell, playing nervous, tentative tennis to lose the first set 6-1.Draper started the second set with greater energy and he forced himself to dictate more with his forehand.

His serving also improved, allowing him to navigate his service games more efficiently and put pressure on Moutet in his return games.In the tough Rome afternoon heat, the match was physical and riddled with anxiety until the end, with numerous points where Draper could have completely lost control.With his immense resilience and problem-solving abilities in the decisive moments he navigated a path to a victory that represents another significant step forward in his development on clay.
politicsSee all
A picture

Chlorinated chicken and hormone-fed beef not crucial to UK trade deal, US suggests

Chlorine-washed chicken and hormone-fed beef may not be essential for a US-UK trade deal, Donald Trump’s agriculture secretary has indicated.Speaking to journalists at a press conference in London, Brooke Rollins said the market was moving away from the two controversial methods of production, which are illegal in the UK and the EU.Rollins is visiting to discuss the specifics of the trade deal the US president, Donald Trump, announced last week, which took in agricultural products including ethanol and beef. On Tuesday, she met the UK’s environment secretary, Steve Reed, who reiterated that the government would never accept chlorine chicken or hormone beef.Asked whether the US would insist on the UK taking chlorine-washed chicken as a condition of any future tariff reductions, she said “only about 5% of our chicken in America is actually treated that way, with the chlorine”, adding “we have moved, over the last decade, completely away from the chlorine chicken”

A picture

‘I thought politics was a dirty thing’ – Zack Polanski on his ‘eco-populist’ vision for the Green party

He’s worked as an actor and a hypnotherapist – and has even been arrested. The Greens’ leadership challenger has had an unconventional route into politics and he’s ready to take on Labour and ReformBy coincidence, I meet Zack Polanski, the 42-year-old deputy leader of the Green party, in a cafe on the same bridge – Waterloo – where he was first arrested for his part in an Extinction Rebellion protest. “I was leading the charge on the very first day of the very first rally,” he begins. He has a dewy, wide-eyed look and quite a nerdy delivery, very enthusiastic, with no side to it. It takes a bit of getting used to, but once you have, you’re all in

A picture

Tory energy spokesman claims UN climate experts are ‘biased’

The Conservative party’s energy spokesperson has attacked leading climate scientists as biased and claimed Kemi Badenoch could take the UK out of the Paris climate agreement.Andrew Bowie, the acting shadow secretary for energy, told the Guardian that the target of reaching net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 – passed into law by Theresa May – was “arbitrary” and “not based on science”.He also indicated that the UK’s participation in the 2015 Paris climate agreement was up for reconsideration in the party’s ongoing review of key policies. The only other country to have withdrawn from the agreement is the US, twice, under Donald Trump.Bowie said: “We are not climate deniers and while we believe in getting to net zero, what we shouldn’t do is be hamstrung by arbitrary targets such as a date of 2050, which was concocted simply because it was a good end point as a date

A picture

Labour to defend aid cuts, claiming UK’s days as ‘a global charity’ are over

The days of viewing the UK as “a global charity” are over, the new development minister, Jenny Chapman, will tell MPs, in remarks that are likely to prove a controversial defence of the large-scale aid cuts she is about to oversee.Lady Chapman replaced Anneliese Dodds in February after Dodds refused to back Keir Starmer’s decision to cut the UK aid budget from 0.5% of gross national income (GNI) to 0.3% in 2027.The move will take £6bn out of the 2023 aid budget of £15

A picture

Counter-terrorism police investigate fires at properties and car linked to Keir Starmer

Counter-terrorism police are investigating three separate fires after a blaze broke out at a home owned by Keir Starmer in the early hours of Monday morning.London fire brigade attended the property in Kentish Town after the fire was reported shortly after 1.30am. The door was damaged but nobody was hurt.The prime minister, who resides with his family in his official residence in Downing Street, is reportedly letting out the four-bedroom home

A picture

Starmer accused of echoing far right with ‘island of strangers’ speech

Keir Starmer has defended his plans to curb net migration after an angry backlash from MPs, businesses and industry to a speech in which he said the UK risked becoming an “island of strangers” without tough new policies.The rhetoric was likened by some critics to the language of Enoch Powell, and the prime minister was accused of pandering to the populist right by insisting he intended to “take back control of our borders” and end a “squalid chapter” of rising inward migration.Some politicians claimed that his words had echoed Powell’s notorious “rivers of blood” speech, which imagined a future multicultural Britain where the white population “found themselves made strangers in their own country”.When asked to respond to accusations he had adopted Powell’s rhetoric, Starmer told the Guardian: “Migrants make a massive contribution to the UK, and I would never denigrate that.”But in words that could further enrage his critics, Starmer insisted that new migrants must “learn the language and integrate” once in the UK