British tennis in healthy shape as attention turns to US hard-court swing

As the grass courts of Wimbledon are put to bed for another year, the annual audit of British tennis fortunes reveals a broadly positive picture.
From a record number of home victories on the first day of the Championships to Cameron Norrieโs quarter-final run and more home success in doubles, there was plenty for British fans to get excited about.
Norrie and Sonay Kartal, who reached the fourth round for the first time, take top honours in singles, while Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool became the first all-British pair to claim the menโs doubles trophy since 1936.
There were first Wimbledon victories for the likes of Arthur Fery, Jack Pinnington Jones and Oliver Tarvet, whose run through qualifying was one of the feelgood stories of the fortnight, and teenage trio Mimi Xu, Hannah Klugman and Mika Stojsavljevic all gained valuable experience.
The major disappointment was that Jack Draper, having elevated himself into the worldโs top four, was such an early faller, losing in the second round to former finalist Marin Cilic.
The draw was not kind, and Draper fronted up brilliantly, as he always does, recognising that the big improvements he has made on hard and clay courts have not yet translated to grass.
Former British number one Greg Rusedski has no doubt he will get there, saying: โNo question about it. Jack is the best British player by far since Andy Murray, one of the most complete players.
โGive Cilic respect. He played great, heโs been a finalist here, he won the US Open. For me, that wasnโt a bad loss at all and Jack will be back strong. Heโs got a consistent team, heโs willing to invest and the futureโs bright. Heโll be deep in this tournament for many years to come.โ
A consistent team is something Emma Raducanu is still searching for, and the encouragement of her strong performance in defeat against Aryna Sabalenka was tempered by the fact she may be back to the drawing board again on the coaching front.
Raducanu and Mark Petchey have clearly gelled but the latterโs TV commitments make a full-time role impossible at the moment.
Britainโs Billie Jean King Cup captain Anne Keothavong has worked with Raducanu on and off court, and said: โIt obviously is important and weโve seen the positive impact Petch has had on her over the last few weeks.
โEqually, itโs not that straightforward. Hopefully sheโs clearer than ever of what is required in terms of what kind of team she wants around her and she finds that. If they can find a way to make it work, then that would be brilliant.โ
There will be six British men and women in the worldโs top 60 on Monday and the target ahead of the US Open will be for the likes of Raducanu, Kartal, Norrie, Katie Boulter and Jacob Fearnley to try to climb into the seeded positions in New York.
โI think itโs brilliant that weโve got three women inside the top 50 and I hope they continue to push each other and the others take inspiration from what theyโre doing,โ added Keothavong.