Key Points

Jack Draper impressively outperformed young Brazilian Joao Fonseca in their French Open clash, securing a spot in the fourth round. Draper showcased dominant power and precision, winning 93% of his first-serve points and maintaining control of most rallies against Fonseca, who struggled with 38 unforced errors. Draper reflects on the tougher conditions of earlier matches and credits his experience for the victory. With this win, Draper continues his strong 2024 season, advancing to face Alexander Bublik next.

Key Points: Jack Draper Dominates Joao Fonseca to Reach French Open Fourth Round

  • Draper defeated Fonseca 6-2, 6-4, 6-2 in Paris
  • Draper hit 93% first-serve points, committing only 20 errors
  • Fonseca advanced to the third round after defeating top players
3 min read

French Open: Draper brushes off Fonseca to reach fourth round

Jack Draper overpowers Joao Fonseca, advancing to the French Open fourth round with a commanding performance.

"I think today, maybe a bit of experience was the difference. - Jack Draper"

Paris, May 31

Jack Draper of Great Britain continued his superb season at the French Open on Saturday as he dispatched the young Brazilian Joao Fonseca 6-2, 6-4, 6-2 to reach the fourth round for the first time in Paris.

The spotlight was on Draper in his second ATP head-to-head meeting with the 18-year-old Fonseca, who had not dropped a set en route to reaching the third round at a major for the first time.

However, the 2024 Next Gen ATP Finals winner Fonseca struggled for consistency. He was unable to live with Draper’s power and physicality in the hot and lively conditions on Court Suzanne-Lenglen. The British lefty hit his heavy topspin forehand with depth and was relaxed for large periods, striking with liquid power to dominate the brutal baseline exchanges.

The 23-year-old won 93 percent of his first-serve points and committed 20 unforced errors to Fonseca’s 38, according to Infosys Stats, to advance after one hour and 49 minutes.

"I played good. The conditions were quite difficult out here. I felt that the first set was really key," Draper was quoted as saying by the ATP Tour on its website. "Then I kind of got on top of him, used my forehand well, served well, and mentally it was a good performance from me, and I am happy to be in the second week here."

Draper had reached Roland Garros without a win in two previous appearances at the clay-court major.

Ranked No. 5 in the ATP Rankings, the lefty, however, managed to capture his maiden ATP Masters 1000 title in Indian Wells in March ­– defeating Fonseca en route – and then reached the championship match on clay in Madrid.

Holding a 25-6 record in the season, Draper will continue the quest for his first major against Alexander Bublik, who beat Portuguese qualifier Henrique Rocha 7-5, 6-1, 6-2.

"In my first two rounds, I played in the night time and playing against Gael [Monfils] the other night, I didn't feel I could hit the ball past him," Draper said on the conditions at this year's Roland Garros. "The guy is so quick, and it was so cold. But today the ball was getting up more, and the faster conditions helped me more."

Fonseca defeated Hubert Hurkacz and Pierre-Hugues Herbert to advance to the third round in Paris. Earlier this season, the 18-year-old upset Andrey Rublev at the Australian Open and captured his maiden ATP Tour title at the 250 event in Buenos Aires.

The Brazilian was backed by vocal support throughout his three matches in the French capital but was unable to give them anything to cheer about against Draper, overhitting all too often. The 18-year-old leaves Roland Garros up 10 places at No. 55 in the ATP Live Rankings.

"João is someone who has come onto the Tour and caught the attention of everyone, the players, the fans. He is an incredible young player and so much to come from him," Draper said oofFonseca. "I think today, maybe a bit of experience [was the difference]. He hasn't played as many Grand Slams as me but I think he has an incredibly bright future at the top of the game," he said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Draper is showing why he's a rising star! His performance against Fonseca was clinical. As an Indian tennis fan, I wish we had more players competing at this level. Our boys need to step up their game on clay courts. #TennisNeedsMoreIndians 🎾
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Priya M.
Fonseca is just 18! He has so much time to improve. Remember when people wrote off Nadal early in his career? This Brazilian kid has the spark - he just needs more experience against top players like Draper. Future looks bright for both!
A
Arjun S.
The way Draper handled the pressure was impressive. 93% first serve points won is no joke! But I wish the article had more analysis of his strategy rather than just stats. Tennis journalism needs deeper insights, not just numbers.
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Neha P.
Watching this match made me miss Sania Mirza even more 😢 When will India produce another tennis star who can compete at Grand Slams? We need better coaching and infrastructure for young players. Meanwhile, kudos to Draper for his consistent performance!
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Vikram D.
The physicality difference was clear - Draper's fitness levels are at another level compared to Fonseca. Indian players should take note - modern tennis requires supreme athleticism along with skill. Our players often focus only on technique.
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Sneha R.
So proud of how sportsmanlike Draper was in praising Fonseca after the match! That's the spirit of tennis. Hope to see more such grace in sports rather than unnecessary aggression we sometimes see. Good luck to both in their careers! 🤗

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