Reilly Opelka Stuns Jack Draper in Miami: How the Giant Killer Found His Groove Again
If you walked into the Hard Rock Stadium courts on Friday expecting a routine victory for the British No. 1, you probably left with a sore neck—and not just from craning it up to look at the man on the other side of the net. Reilly Opelka is back, and he’s making waves in the worst way for the top seeds at the Miami Open.
Let’s be honest. When the draw came out, most people were circling this as a potential hiccup for the Brit, but not a full-on stop sign. Draper was coming off that weird blip in Indian Wells—you know, the kind of loss that makes you scratch your head—and he looked hungry to put it right. But Opelka? The guy has been quietly reminding everyone that a 6'11" serve isn't just a gimmick. It’s a weapon of mass destruction when it’s firing on all cylinders.
How the Giant Rewrote the Script
From the first game, the vibe was different. Usually, when you face a server like Opelka, the strategy is simple: hang in there, wait for a tiebreak, and pray. But against Draper, the American looked like he had been studying the tapes for a month. He wasn’t just bombing aces (though, trust me, there were plenty of those). He was mixing in slices that stayed ankle-high, forcing the 22-year-old to bend those long limbs in ways he didn’t want to.
It was the kind of performance that makes you look back at the early rounds—the Nakashima vs. Opelka battle was a warning shot, but everyone wrote it off as Brandon having an off day. Then came Reilly Opelka vs. Rinky Hijikata? That was a clinic in efficiency. But this? This was a statement. This wasn’t just a big guy hitting big serves; this was a tactical dismantling.
- The Serve: Opelka was landing 78% of his first serves. When you’re that tall and hitting those spots, the returner just becomes a spectator.
- The Return Game: This is where Opelka won the match. He actually got aggressive on Draper’s second serve, something we haven’t seen consistently from him since his injury layoff.
- The Mental Edge: After dropping a tight second set, Opelka didn’t fold. In the third, he looked like the seasoned veteran, not the guy coming back from surgery.
What’s Next for the American Colossus?
Watching this match unfold, you couldn’t help but think about the bracket implications. When you look ahead, you’re staring down potential landmines. If the serve is clicking like this, even the best returners in the world are going to have sleepless nights. We saw flashes of this in the David Goffin vs. Reilly Opelka match earlier in the season—Goffin, one of the best returners on tour, looked absolutely helpless. It’s that same energy.
For Draper, this is a tough pill to swallow. He wanted to bounce back from the California disappointment, but Miami is proving to be a graveyard for high seeds this year. For the rest of us? It’s just fun to watch a guy like Opelka play with that kind of freedom. He’s not just a giant serving robot anymore; he’s a competitor who looks like he actually wants to grind out the tough points.
If you’re betting on the next round, you’d be a fool to look past the big man. He’s playing with house money, and when a 6'11" dude is playing loose, that’s a terrifying thought for whoever draws him next.