
Jack Draper enters the Wimbledon meat grinder as Britain's Big Thing
Nobody seemed to mind. In fairness Wimbledon's big Tuesday best-of-British event did feel a bit like this. Less an act of white-hot sporting drama, more just, like, a really cool thing happening.
An hour and 13 minutes into this first-round match Sebastián Báez would retire with a knee injury at 6-2, 6-2, 2-1 down. There will be far tougher opponents than the world No 38 who barely left an imprint on the Wimbledon turf, and whose only obvious victory plan was to keep bunting the ball back until one of you dies of heat exhaustion. There was no chance of that on the Wimbledon grass. Instead this was the tennis equivalent of watching a man being run over by a truck, albeit a very elegant, high-end, luxury-spec truck.
And so Draper has now progressed to the second round, and also taken a step along another significant pathway. For Draper this Wimbledon is a kind of coming out event, a society debut. Not in any sport-related sense. He's No 4 in the world. He has already vaulted through every level placed in front of him, from the nepo-baby jibes of the junior tennis circuit, a place that makes even the drowned world of kids cricket seem insufficiently neurotic, to proving himself as a genuine elite presence on tour.
But this is also Draper's first post-Murray summer, his first as the Big Thing, the key domestic TV event at this arena of swoons, flushes and also hunger. It would emerge later that the handbag-biting man was in fact part of a team of influencers sent by Draper's fashion sponsor to create their own sub-spectacle, amplify the brand, influence.
The All England Club can hardly complain. Wimbledon and Draper is also essentially a brand partnership. British star power has been vital to this place's transformation into a hugely potent financial engine, spawned out of the appearance of sporting mania as a feature in public life in the mid-90s. Wimbledon entwined itself around this, the corporate hospitality dollar, the pink trouser pound. The industry is real. It needs meat. So Draper must head into the grinder, a deeply mannered kind of grinder, but a grinder nonetheless.
Court No 1 was viciously hot and humid in late afternoon, the kind of heat that sits on every surface like heavy gravity. There was a slow wave of whoops and whistles as the players walked out, Draper picturesquely vast next to Báez. There are still questions to be answered here. What are the shapes, the sounds, the iconography of the Draper fandom?
Henman Energy was fevered and oddly sexless, with a vague sense of cheering for a minor royal cousin. The Murray years were more nuanced, a deeper bond, a higher ceiling, a sense of greatness to be touched. Draper is something else, a product off the high-end factory line, a machine made to hit and stretch and win.
You can see why elite players consider him elite. There are no weaknesses in his physical toolbox. Tall but good feet. Power but still whippy and light in his shoulders. And yes we will objectify him, because this is tennis, a relentless elite sport, but also basically a country-house flirtation that got out of hand. The jaw, the shoulders, the sculpted lines. This thing is rangy, classical, elite-athlete handsome. We have one of these now. How is it going to feel?
'Come on Drapes' lone voices shouted in the crowd, trying it out, as he hit long in the opening game, searching for timing in that full-rotation forehand. But with 20 minutes gone it was already 5-1. The second set was if anything even easier. And outside on the big-screen slope beyond Court No 1 the vibe was equally comfortable.
There are issues to be settled here. What will we call this space now, given it seems to need to be called something? Henman Hill always sounded like a bottle of bad English wine. Does it have to be a hill? Jackatoa? The Jackerhorn? Jackstock? Is there a Jackstonbury angle?
All of this fluff has a hard commercial edge. Sport must be sold to people who don't like sport. Eyeballs must be harvested. But it is a shame, because Draper is interesting in his own right. He has taken time to find his best self, struggled with nerves, and spoken recently about the influence of his breathing coach, which is very Big Sport kind of thing, a place where often the real interest is the challenge of simply surviving in this world, existing on that lighted stage.
Draper has spent a lot of time working out how to be alone, waiting better, being in hotels better, remembering to breathe, learning to win, as here, without taking a bite out of himself. On this evidence it might just be an unusually comfortable reboot.
Hashtags

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


BBC News
5 minutes ago
- BBC News
Rodgers sees Celtic 'doing more' in market
Celtic do not need "a major overhaul", says Brendan Rodgers, but the manager expects to see the Scottish champions "doing more" in the transfer has recruited goalkeeper Ross Doohan, forwards Benjamin Nygren and Callum Osmand, plus defender Kieran Tierney, while left-back Greg Taylor has joined PAOK."We're not needing a major overhaul of the squad, but freshness is so important," Rodgers told club media."Some of these guys have been here a long time. It's so important, even in a winning squad, that you refresh that and reset the competition in the squad. We've done some really good business up until now." However, he stressed: "I see us doing more to get us set up for hopefully what will be a really exciting season."Tierney departed Celtic for Arsenal in a £25m transfer six years ago and the Scotland international has returned Glasgow as a free agent."Sometimes top players like that might come back later on in their career, but we're getting Kieran at 27 years of age," Rodgers said."I was with him during the summer, so I know first hand as well how excited he is to be here and I'm looking forward to seeing this new version of Kieran, having had the experience in the Premier League and playing at a top club like Arsenal."He'll come back here with greater maturity both as a person, as a professional and tactically and now we can really get the benefits of that."Of Sweden cap Nygren, Rodgers added: "He's a leader on the pitch and he produces on the pitch in terms of his goals he scores, what he creates and he's got real good physicality."I'm really looking forward to seeing him adapt to how we play."


BBC News
10 minutes ago
- BBC News
Norwich Castle's public reopening date is confirmed after revamp
The completion of a five-year renovation of a city centre castle has been confirmed with a date for its reopening to the started at Norwich Castle in the summer of 2020 but was delayed by issues including the Covid pandemic and difficulties sourcing building problems contributed to the cost of the Royal Palace Reborn project rising to £27.5m, from the initial estimate of £ Norfolk County Council has confirmed that visitors will be able to see the 900-year-old building's new look from Thursday, 7 August. The project's contractor had previously told the BBC that the work would be completed by the end of was also delayed by the discovery of hidden Norman and Victorian features, alongside a need to replace a leaking revamp includes restoring original floor levels in the Grade I listed keep and recreating the great hall and the apartments of Norman kings.A Norfolk Museums Service spokesperson said: "We're incredibly excited to announce that Norwich Castle's Royal Palace will open on 7 August 2025."Made possible thanks to National Lottery players, the redevelopment project Norwich Castle: Royal Palace Reborn has received £13m from The National Lottery Heritage Fund and support from Norfolk County Council."The keep has been completely reimagined as part of the project, bringing Norman England vividly back to life." The county council provided funds of £4.7m last year, in addition to previous increases to the budget.A new gallery of Medieval life is being created in partnership with the British Museum, which will see about 1,000 artefacts go on Museums Service also believes the castle will now be "the UK's most accessible" as there will be step-free access from the basement up to the rooftop visitor facilities, including a glass atrium and a new shop, cafe and learning space, opened last year as part of the booking for tickets will open on Thursday 24 July, with priority booking opening a week earlier for those with a Norfolk Museums Pass. Follow Norfolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


The Sun
10 minutes ago
- The Sun
Millennials scream as trend ‘everyone born in the 90s' remembers makes a comeback & ‘gives them PTSD'
YOU couldn't wear a skirt in the 90s without one of these dangling from your hips. And millennials all hoped it would be the last we'd see of the disk belts, but Gen-Z seems to have other plans. 2 The giant belts which would often ping off at the most awkward of times have made a comeback in high street stores. The likes of New Look, Primark, PLT and Boohoo are all stocking it. And one mum was horrified when her teen daughter picked up to buy. Taking to TikTok, Nina, wife of the famous SpudBros founder, shared her daughter's reaction to the 90s accessory. She told her mum she wanted to buy it for her summer holiday as Nina looked on mortified. "You do realise that when I was about 14 that is what we used to wear," she said. "We thought we were really cool and then we bullied them ever since. "Now they've made this comeback and you're saying it's nice?!" "They were not lying when they said fashions come back around. I need to find a photo of me in one of these," Nina captioned the post. While Nina and her daughter's opinion on the belt differed, many agreed with Nina in the comments. 'I can feel the blisters' shoppers cry as River Island becomes latest high street store to jump on 'painful' 90s shoe trend The clip soon went viral on her TikTok account @ ninadixon28 with over 2.5 million views and 113k likes Many were horrified to see it make its way back into stores. One person wrote: "I had one in every colour. I used to wear them with long rara skirts in the early 2000s." Another commented: "My mum used to say fashion repeats itself and it's true." Fashion editor reveals the 90s trends that should stay in the past NINETIES and noughties trends especially have become a hit with Gen Z - most likely because they didn't wear them the first time round. Here, Deputy Fashion Editor Abby McHale gives the rundown of some of the trends that have made a comeback that we wish did not. Disc belts "A hit with celebrities like Victoria Beckham and Blake Lively, the belt itself did nothing that a belt should actually do - it was a mere fashion statement, not a piece to actually hold anything up. "And it seems it's not just me who is enraged by its return, with many taking to TikTok to give their views, saying: 'Oh no not the disc belt! I don't think I have the energy for it a 2nd time around' - I feel you." Jelly shoes "After not being seen on shelves for decades, they've made a reappearance and this time they're not just for kids. "Coming in a range of colourful patterns, you can get them all over the high street in either flat or heeled versions. "Not only will you look very childish wearing such shoes, but people will also need to learn that they aren't the comfiest - blister plasters will come in handy." Pedal pushers "The cropped knee-grazing trouser were all the rage in the 1990s and 2000s, but this time the model fash pack are all over them - with both Bella Hadid and Emily Ratajkowski wearing them out recently. "The original IT girls, Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn and Brigitte Bardot helped make the trousers - also called Capri pants - look effortlessly cool and glam. "Somehow this time round they don't seem to be having that same effect." "The trauma from the disk belt," penned a third. Meanwhile a fourth said: "The late 90s and 00s has entered the chat!!"