Postpublished at 14:28 British Summer Time
Brooksby 3-6 0-0 Draper*
Oops. Draper starts set two with a double fault.
Watch live coverage of day two of Queen's men's event (UK only)
NOW: Qualifier Corentin Moutet beats third seed Taylor Fritz 6-7 (5-7) 7-6 (9-7) 7-5
Jack Draper beats Jenson Brooksby 6-3 6-1 to reach second round
Top seed Carlos Alcaraz beats lucky loser Adam Walton 6-4 7-6 (7-4)
But fifth seed Alex de Minaur lose 6-4 6-2 to Jiri Lehecka
Jess Anderson
Brooksby 3-6 0-0 Draper*
Oops. Draper starts set two with a double fault.
Brooksby 3-6 Draper
Draper rips a forehand to the corner of the court at the end of a lengthy rally to take the opening set with a double break.
The British number one is in control here.
*Brooksby 3-5 Draper
Another set point for Draper, can he take his chance this time?
*Brooksby 3-5 Draper
Brooksby saves set point when he sends Draper out wide then hits the overhead smash to the other side of the court.
The British number one is scrambling to get across and remarkably reaches it but can't wrap his racquet round the ball enough to keep it inside the lines.
*Brooksby 3-5 Draper
Brooksby battles back to 30-30 as Draper sends a forehand long but hands Draper a set point as he slips slightly on the forehand and sends it the wrong side of the paint.
*Brooksby 3-5 Draper
Draper attacks Brooksby's second serve and the American puffs out his cheeks as he heads back to the baseline at 0-30.
*Brooksby 3-5 Draper
Nicely done by Draper as he takes the hold to love with the help of a couple of aces and a crunching forehand at the net.
He backs up that break of serve with his best service game so far and puts himself within one game of the first set.
Brooksby 3-4 Draper*
Draper looks focussed in the chair at the change of ends as he closes his eyes in concentration.
A hold here would put him in control of this set.
Gary Rose
BBC Sport at Queen's Club
Jenson Brooksby’s serve is a little unorthodox as he starts with the racquet horizontal over his shoulder. It had been working well… until now as Jack Draper breaks, drawing big cheers from the crowd.
Brooksby 3-4 Draper*
Got it!
Brooksby shoves his forehand into the net and Draper takes the break.
Much to the delight of the home crowd.
*Brooksby 3-3 Draper
Now Brooksby finds a first serve and at a crucial moment as he hits an ace to save break point.
But Draper brings up another opportunity when Brooksby goes long.
*Brooksby 3-3 Draper
Ooooh.
Draper brings up a first break point of the match as Brooksby doesn't execute the overhead smash well and Draper is able to play the drop shot which the American can't scoop over the net.
*Brooksby 3-3 Draper
Brooksby can't find a first serve but Draper is unable to do much with the much slower second one.
He gets to deuce when Brooksby sends his forehand long.
Gary Rose
BBC Sport at Queen's Club
There’s not too many empty seats now with the stands here the fullest they have been so far this week.
On court there’s been little to separate the two, both mixing up some good serves and some accurate shots during play.
The addition of a welcome breeze is also ensuring spectators are staying in their seats longer between games.
*Brooksby 3-3 Draper
Draper once again has a bit of a wobble at 30-30 on serve but hits back-to-back aces to take the hold.
Brooksby shakes his head. Nothing he can do about those.
Brooksby 3-2 Draper*
Brooksby takes another routine hold as Draper goes for power on the backhand but can't keep his shot inside the lines.
*Brooksby 2-2 Draper
That's better.
He recovers well to take the hold to 15.
Brooksby 2-1 Draper*
A first double fault for Draper. He's not settled into his service games as quickly as Brooksby has so far.
Brooksby 2-1 Draper*
A comfortable hold to love for Brooksby.
These two met in the third round of Indian Wells this year. Draper came out on top there and went on to lift the title.
So far we're going game for game.
Andrew Castle
BBC Sport tennis commentator on BBC Radio 5 Live
He’s [Jack Draper] done enough in the last year where really his life’s changed completely.
I think he’s done enough that he’s ready to play anytime, anywhere.
He really is in that first flush of early stardom where every time he plays, he might do something a little bit different that amazes. He’s changing his level, seemingly month by month.