'Lucky' Draper over his injuries and ready for Rublev examination
The Guardian|September 04, 2023
As the rest of the top 100 tennis players moved on from the clay courts of the French Open to the lawns of Wimbledon and beyond, Jack Draper was nowhere to be seen. During his first-round match against Tomás Etcheverry in Paris at the end of May, he had picked up a left-shoulder problem that forced him to retire from the match, yet another injury in a season defined by them.
Tumaini Carayol
'Lucky' Draper over his injuries and ready for Rublev examination

The minor setback that he anticipated would be resolved by the time he stepped on to the grass turned out to be a major injury. Instead of competing at Wimbledon, Draper spent each day arriving at the National Tennis Centre early, doing two fitness sessions a day while having to remain incredibly patient through rehab as he saw minimal progress because of the seriousness of his injury.

"Every day was sort of groundhog day, getting up and going into training and making sure we do the best to have a great day - listening to a lot of David Goggins," Draper said this week, laughing. "Just trying to motivate each other and get back to where we are, around people who are going through the same struggles and have the same sort of paths. I think, for a tennis player, it's very important."

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The Guardian

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The Guardian

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