Britain’s
Jack Draper has opened up about his ambitions
for the upcoming
US Open despite still struggling with an arm injury. The
23-year-old will be entering the fourth and the final Grand Slam of the year as
the fifth-seed player, only behind the likes of world number one and defending
champion Jannik Sinner, Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz, Germany’s Alexander Zverev and
America’s Taylor Fritz.
Draper is coming into the competition after taking a lengthy
break after featuring at Wimbledon, where he was knocked out after losing in the
second round to Croatia’s Marin Cilic with a score of 6-4, 6-3, 1-6, 6-4. Draper recently returned to the court and featured in the revamped US Open mixed doubles event, where he and his partner, America’s Jessica Pegula, were eventually knocked out after losing in the semifinal to the pair of Casper Ruud and Iga Swiatek.
Draper’s decision not to feature in any event after Wimbledon
in the singles category is to recover from an army injury that he suffered
during the clay season. Draper has spoken to
Sky Sports ahead of his tournament
opener in New York and talked in detail about the impact of the injury he
suffered earlier this season. Draper also highlighted that while he has not
recovered completely from the injury, he expects to go all in when he appears at the US Open.
"I first started feeling it towards the middle of
the clay season," said Draper. "I felt like my arm was shutting down
a little bit when I was hitting forehands and on the serve, as well. It kind of
got progressively a bit worse. Then on the grass it got quite painful. I didn't
know what I was dealing with. After the grass, I got it checked out. I had some
bone stress, bone bruising, in my humerus on my left side. It is one of those where, if you keep playing
with it, it could become very serious. I had to take some time out. Saying
that, it was not so bad, because I could obviously do a lot of other things
physically. It wasn't like I had to stop completely. Tough injury to have, but
definitely one where I had to look after it. It's an injury which takes time to
heal. It might be giving me some discomfort, that's for sure. It's not
something which I'm going to go out on Monday and feel like it's holding me
back at all."
Staying optimistic
Overall, Draper is having an impressive season on the
court in the singles category, where he has won 29 out of 38 matches. Those victories
include his maiden ATP 1000 title at the Indian Wells, where he defeated Denmark’s
Casper Ruud in the final in straight sets with a score of 6-2, 6-2. Draper will
be facing Argentina’s Federico Agustin Gomez in the first round of the US Open
on Monday. Talking about his preparation for this year’s edition of the tournament, where he played in the semifinals last year, Draper expressed optimism that his preparation is complete and also highlighted the positive impact of participating in the US Open mixed doubles event with Pegula.
“I have been training a lot the last month or so, physically really
pushed myself hard, and that makes me feel mentally really good about
myself," said Draper. "I'm
just really excited to be back here at the US Open and back competing, doing
what I like doing best. It [playing the mixed doubles event] was kind of
perfect for me because I hadn't had any competition, I hadn't felt that feeling
of playing in front of people and that sort of stuff for a little while. It was
a really positive experience for myself, and I definitely feel a lot sharper having played that as opposed to maybe having a training week."