Jack Draper’s dream run at the Queen's Club Championships ended in dramatic, and destructive, fashion on Saturday afternoon, with a shattered racket, a broken sponsor board, and a boiling point meltdown witnessed live on the Andy Murray Arena.
The British No. 1, who has been in red-hot form on grass this season, was edged out 6-4, 4-6, 7-5 in a tense semi-final showdown against Czech star Jiri Lehecka.
But it was not just the final scoreline that had fans talking: it was Draper’s visible fury as the match slipped through his fingers.
After over two hours of baseline slugfests, aces, and cat-and-mouse rallies, Draper’s frustration erupted in the 11th game of the final set when Lehecka broke to take a 6-5 lead.
Moments earlier, Draper had been battling to hold serve at 5-5. Lehecka’s vicious forehand return clipped the baseline, zipping past the Brit as he lunged in desperation. Unable to get his racket on the ball and slipping on the damp turf, Draper charged toward the LED sponsor signage, and let loose. He smashed his racket with force into the hoarding, cracking both the frame and the glowing advertising panel beneath.
To make matters worse, Draper appeared to hurt himself in the process. He shook his hand repeatedly and looked in visible discomfort, prompting murmurs from commentators and concern from his team in the player’s box. Nonetheless, he played on, but the damage, emotionally and perhaps physically, was already done.
Statistically, it was a contest that could have gone either way. In fact, Draper won just one point less than Lehecka overall: 91 to the Czech’s 92. Both players took exactly 50% of the total points played, a testament to just how tight this battle was.
However, it was Lehecka who thrived when it mattered. He converted 40% of his break points (2/5), compared to Draper’s 17% (1/6), and won 64% of “pressure points”, dwarfing Draper’s 36%.
This semi-final appearance still marks Draper’s best result at Queen’s and caps off a solid grass-court fortnight after his Stuttgart title win. Although the meltdown will raise questions ahead of Wimbledon, where mental resilience is as important as shot-making. His apparent hand injury didn’t seem to affect him for the remainder of the match, but his team will be keeping a close eye in the days to come.
For Lehecka, this is a breakthrough moment. Known more for his power on hard courts, the Czech has now reached his first ATP 500 final on grass and will look to ride this momentum into SW19.
Striking the hard to maintain grass court in front of your home fans and your knee like a psycho after losing a point, you will never make me like Jack Draper. pic.twitter.com/jg6Mrddb8U
— Zain (@ItzzZain10) June 21, 2025
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