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Not long to go until the players take to the court

The 24,000-seater stadium is steadily filling up as Sinner and Draper go through their final preparations before that long, long, long walk down the tunnel.

Already in situ: Draper’s compatriot and habitual box-occupier, Anna Wintour.

Draper’s taken a lot of heat for his sour purple-baggy shirt combination, but this commentator far prefers it to Sinner’s lichened gargoyle green. Wonder what Wintour thinks?

It’s been a great day for British tennis already

With Alfie Hewett and Gordon Reid winning their wheelchair tennis final against Japan’s Tokito Oda and Takuya Miki 6-2 6-1.

The pair previously won silver at Tokyo three years ago – but now they have a shiny new gold medal to add to their collection!

Also on Arthur Ashe this evening

New York’s finest showcourt will play host to an All-American battle royale between Taylor Fritz and Frances Tiafoe.

Fritz, like Draper, is also playing his maiden Grand Slam final, after bullying past Alexander Zverev. Tiafoe, by contrast, is a New York natural, returning to this stage for the first time since 2022, when he was defeated by eventual champion Carlos Alcaraz.

As like Draper, Fritz has significantly fewer minutes in his legs that Tiafoe – both he and Sinner will have to draw upon their reserves if their matches go long.

Beyond making up an unbeaten doubles pairing in Montreal this summer, Sinner and Draper go way back. On a tour where making friends with your opponent can be loaded with pitfalls, the two players have forged a strong bond – that as Draper’s mother Nicky revealed yesterday, has even extended to Sinner teaching her son how to make pasta.

Mamma mia! You can read more about the pair’s friendship ahead of their meeting on Arthur Ashe, below.

Strapping-watch

Those who took note of Draper’s defeat of Alex de Minaur on Wednesday will remember that he took a medical timeout to tape up his right thigh after pulling up in a little discomfort after the end of the first set.

But strapping be gone! Draper was practicing without the aid earlier today, having shared after the match that he didn’t imagine being troubled long-term by twinge.

Draper will need to pull off the match of his life

… if he has a hope of getting past the Australian Open winner on Arthur Ashe this evening.

The 22-year-old has been in flying form, to be sure, but has had a charmed run through the draw aided by retirements, injured rivals, and Tomas Machac’s game entirely deserting him.

Sinner, by contrast, looks every inch the Grand Slam winner he was down under and a far cry from the uneasy, dizzy competitor despatched by Daniil Medvedev in his Wimbledon quarter-final.

Unbowed by the swirling controversy over the revelation of his two failed doping tests earlier this year, Sinner comes to New York straight off a confident win in Cincinnati, and made former champion Medvedev look almost commonplace in their quarter-final on Wednesday night.

How far ago three years must feel…

2021 was the first and last time that their pair met as professionals, when No 1 Sinner was ranked a lowly 23 in the world, and Draper was a mere wildcard on home turf at London’s Queen’s Club.

At least the Briton has the head-to-head in his favour, eh?

WATCH: Excited students look ahead to Draper’s semi-final

Inside Jack Draper’s family

The British No1 will play Australia’s Alex de Minaur for a place in the last four later today, and has enjoyed stepping out of Andy Murray’s shadow and into the spotlight over the past 10 days.

The 22-year-old still has a long way to go to match the achievements of the three-time grand slam-winning Murray, but with his family for support, he may just make it to the very top of the game.

Draper is the one pulling out all the show-stopping shots on court, but the team behind him have played a significant role in his rise as well.

Another fairytale in New York? Draper’s run to the semi-final

The British number one has looked in top form in New York in the past week and he hasn’t lost a set coming in to tonight’s semi-final.

Let’s take a look at his tournament so far:

Beat Zhang Zhizhen 6-3, 6-0, 4-0 walkover

Facundo Díaz Acosta 6-4, 6-2, 6-2

Botic van de Zandschulp 6-3, 6-4, 6-2

Tomas Machac 6-3, 6-1, 6-2

Alex de Minaur 6-3, 7-5, 6-2

Emma Raducanu’s US Open title in 2021 showed the world anything is possible. And for young tennis players in Britain, who had grown up watching the god-like figure of Andy Murray, it showed that mortals could win Grand Slams, too.

Jack Draper was one such player. Watching Raducanu’s astonishing run at Flushing Meadows lit a spark in him and, this fortnight, that spark has burst into flame.

‘What Emma did was incredibly inspiring,’ said Draper, who takes on world No 1 Jannik Sinner on Friday night at the US Open, in his first Grand Slam semi-final. ‘I’ve known her from a young age, and to see what she did was incredible. I was very proud of her.

Good evening

Hello and welcome to Mail Sport’s online coverage of Jack Draper’s US Open semi-final clash against Jannik Sinner – the British number one against the world’s top ranked player.

Draper became the fourth British man to reach the last four at Flushing Meadows in the Open era after he defeated Australian Alex de Minaur on Wednesday, following in the footsteps of Tim Henman, Greg Rusedski and Andy Murray.

But he’ll be hoping to go one further and book his place in his first grand slam final by overcoming the Italian world number one who he rose up through the junior ranks with.

The match promises to serve up an intriguing watch and Mail Sport will guide you through with all the build-up, analysis and minute-by-minute updates on the court.

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