
Tennis-Britain's Draper races past injured Baez in Wimbledon opener
A dominant Draper was leading 6-2 6-2 2-1 on a boiling Court One when Baez, who hurt his knee earlier in the contest when slipping on the baseline, decided enough was enough.
Home fans without court tickets had parked themselves on the sun-baked hill well ahead of world number four Draper's entrance, and it was all over in a flash.
Not that Draper, the highest British seed at Wimbledon since Andy Murray returned as defending champion in 2017, will care a jot that it will not go down as a Wimbledon classic.
He has been saddled with trying to fill the void left by the retirement of twice champion Murray, and preserving energy will be vital if Draper is to go deep in a tournament in which the spotlight will burn like no other.
Baez, ranked 38th in the world, looked like a tough opponent for the left-handed Draper. In reality it was a mismatch.
Draper's serving power and venomous forehand were too much for a player more suited to clay and the writing was on the wall for Baez when he dropped his opening service game.
The first set lasted only 25 minutes and towards the end of it the lightweight Baez slipped awkwardly when trying to change direction and early in the second required a lengthy check over from a doctor.
Had it been a boxing match the towel might have been thrown in by then as Draper was handing out some serious punishment.
Admirably Baez opted to carry on but the outcome was never in doubt and after he lost serve at the start of the third set he walked to the net and offered his hand.
Draper faces a much sterner test in round two with big-serving former runner-up Marin Cilic standing in his way.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Ken Ferris)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
39 minutes ago
- The Sun
British amateur Tarvet eyes Wimbledon upset against Alcaraz
BRITISH amateur Oliver Tarvet is preparing for the match of his life as he takes on two-time Wimbledon champion Carlos Alcaraz in the second round. The 21-year-old, ranked 733rd in the world, has already earned £99,000 ($136,000) from his qualifying run but must navigate strict amateur rules to keep his US college eligibility. 'I've got to find £60,000, £70,000 of expenses. Tennis is an expensive sport. So, hopefully, I can make that happen. Just pay my coaches a little bit extra. I don't know. We'll figure something out. Fly business class!' Tarvet said. Despite his underdog status, he remains confident. 'I'm quietly confident that I can win against anyone. Alcaraz isn't an exception to that.' Meanwhile, British number one Emma Raducanu faces a tough test against 2023 champion Marketa Vondrousova. Raducanu, still managing a back issue, has tempered expectations. 'I don't expect much,' she admitted. Vondrousova, fresh from winning the Berlin Open, is relieved to be pain-free. 'When you are playing with pain, it's crazy. You just think about it all the time,' she said. Brazilian teenager Joao Fonseca, making his Wimbledon debut, is drawing inspiration from Roger Federer. 'His style, his slice, coming to net, chip and charge. It was complete. That's what I want,' said Fonseca after his straight-sets win.


Free Malaysia Today
43 minutes ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Top seed Sinner eases into Wimbledon second round
Jannik Sinner has won three of the past six Grand Slams. (AP pic) LONDON : Top seed Jannik Sinner eased into the Wimbledon second round today, brushing aside fellow Italian Luca Nardi in straight sets. Unfazed by the searing heat, Sinner barely broke sweat in a 6-4, 6-3, 6-0 victory lasting just 1 hour and 48 minutes on Court 1. 'I'm very happy to come back here to such a special place for me,' Sinner said. 'Playing an Italian is very unfortunate but one has to go through and luckily it was me.' Sinner last week insisted his surprise decision to part with two of his coaching staff on the eve of Wimbledon would not affect his bid to win the tournament for the first time. He opted to move on from Marco Panichi and Ulises Badio, his trainer and physiotherapist, as he looks for a new direction following his painful French Open final loss to Carlos Alcaraz. The pair had been employed by Sinner since September 2024, helping him retain the Australian Open crown in January and reach the Roland Garros showpiece in June. Asked if the decision might jeopardise his Wimbledon challenge over the next fortnight, Sinner was adamant it would be beneficial, with coaches Simone Vagnozzi and Darren Cahill still on his staff. On the evidence of his dominant display against Nardi the world No 1, who returned from a three-month doping ban in May, will be just fine regardless of the coaching shake-up. 'We worked a lot after Halle (grass-court tournament) on the serve and in important moments I felt I was serving very well,' Sinner said. 'First matches are never easy, so I'm very happy with the performance. It's a new tournament, new challenges. 'If you don't enjoy to play on these courts, I don't know where you will enjoy. I will try to keep going.' Sinner has won three of the past six Grand Slams, but the 23-year-old blew a two-set lead and wasted three match points as Alcaraz staged a comeback for the ages to win the French Open final. Sinner has failed to reach the Wimbledon final in his four visits, with a last four appearance in 2023 ranking as his best effort. The Italian's Wimbledon preparations were also dented by a shock last 16 defeat against Alexander Bublik at Halle. Playing world No 95 Nardi for the first time, Sinner had little trouble dispatching the 21-year-old in his first Grand Slam match since that bitter defeat at Roland Garros. Sinner recently released a duet titled Polvere e Gloria, which means Dust and Glory, with renowned tenor Andrea Bocelli. The Italian will hope he continues hitting all the right notes in his Wimbledon title bid.


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
Soccer-Dortmund hold off Monterrey to reach Club World Cup quarter-finals
Soccer Football - FIFA Club World Cup - Round of 16 - Borussia Dortmund v CF Monterrey - Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. - July 1, 2025 Borussia Dortmund's Serhou Guirassy celebrates scoring their second goal IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Brett Davis ATLANTA, Georgia (Reuters) -Borussia Dortmund held off a stirring second-half fightback from Monterrey to complete the Club World Cup quarter-final line-up with a 2-1 win in a round-of-16 thriller at the Mercedes-Benz Arena on Tuesday. Clinical finishes from Serhou Guirassy in the 14th and 24th minutes put Dortmund on top at the break but German Berterame hit back for Monterrey in the 48th minute and the Mexican club pressed for an equaliser until the final whistle. The Dortmund defence held firm, however, to set up a last-eight meeting with 15-times European champions Real Madrid in New Jersey on Saturday. There will be no reunion for the Bellingham family, however, with a yellow card shown to Dortmund's Jobe in the 28th minute ruling him out of the clash with big brother Jude's Real. (Reporting by Nick Mulvenney in Sydney, editing by Peter Rutherford)