Daniil Medvedev stopped Jack Draper from defending his Indian Wells title with a 6-1, 7-5 victory in the quarter-finals on Thursday. The 11th seed took full advantage of Draper’s fatigue after the Briton’s hard-fought win over Novak Djokovic the previous day. Medvedev dictated play from the start and looked sharp throughout.
He broke serve in the first game of the match and never faced a break point in the opening set. Draper struggled to find his timing against the Russian’s flat hitting and strong serve. The set ended quickly with Medvedev in complete control.
The second set developed into a tighter battle. Both players held their serve until the score reached 5-5. Serving at 0-15, Draper reacted to a deep forehand from Medvedev by throwing his arms out wide. He thought the ball had gone long. The rally carried on and Draper won the point when Medvedev netted a backhand.
Medvedev immediately went to chair umpire Aurelie Tourte and requested a video review for hindrance. After watching the replay several times, Tourte decided that Draper’s arm movement had distracted his opponent. She awarded the point to Medvedev, changing the score to 0-30.
The decision brought loud boos from the stands. Draper saved one break point with an ace but dropped his serve on the next opportunity. Medvedev then held to love to seal the win and reach the semi-finals for the fourth year in a row.
The players had a lengthy discussion at the net afterwards. Medvedev told Draper he did not feel entirely comfortable with the call. Draper replied that he believed the better player had won the match but that his gesture had not distracted Medvedev enough to lose the point.
Medvedev addressed the incident in his post-match comments. “Was I distracted big time? No. Do I feel good about it? Not really. But I also don’t feel like I cheated or something,” he said. “I got a bit distracted. I let it go, I let the referee decide.”
Draper took responsibility for his performance level. He admitted he ran out of energy and could not match Medvedev’s consistency a day after the emotional Djokovic victory. The 24-year-old also said the hindrance ruling felt harsh because the rally had continued for several shots.
This result marks the end of Draper’s title defence. Limited by injury for much of the time since last year’s US Open, he had made a promising return this week. The loss will drop him in the rankings, but the run showed his potential when fit. Medvedev now prepares for a semi-final against Carlos Alcaraz. The Russian has collected 17 wins this season and carries a long streak of set victories into the match.
British interest in the men’s singles ended on Thursday as Cameron Norrie fell to Alcaraz in the other quarter-final. The hindrance decision has once again highlighted the challenges of the rule in modern tennis, particularly with video technology available to umpires.





