Draper has performed extra this season than ever in his burgeoning profession, having steered away from the health points which dogged his early days on the ATP Tour.
However he admitted he was feeling the results of barely having per week off, like all the highest gamers, since early April.
The European clay-court swing, which culminates on the French Open in early June, goes straight right into a British grass season topped by Wimbledon – the top of the yr for dwelling stars like Draper.
This yr, gamers switched again to clay for the Paris Olympics at Roland Garros after Wimbledon.
That was an added complication – and an enormous ask of their our bodies – earlier than they went again to the North American laborious courts main as much as the US Open.
“Since Miami [in March] I simply have not had any time,” added Draper.
“We went straight into the clay, then straight on to the grass, straight to the Olympics, straight out to Montreal, Cincinnati, coaching week, US Open, right here, then it is Asia, then it is indoor season.
“I take a look at the kind of schedule, and I do know gamers have completed it for years, however the way in which the ATP have modified to 2 weeks with the Masters and a lot of these issues, it is giving us no time any extra.
“There’s actually no break. It is actually mentally and bodily difficult.”
After the Davis Cup, Draper’s subsequent scheduled occasion is an ATP occasion in Beijing which begins on 26 September.
He isn’t the primary high participant to lift considerations a few schedule which he feels is punishing.
Iga Swiatek, the ladies’s world primary, not too long ago stated she felt the present calls for have been “fairly exhausting”.
The five-time Grand Slam champion criticised the WTA Tour for his or her necessary necessities, which says gamers must compete in 21 tournaments – as much as 29 weeks – every year.
Earlier on Friday, Swiatek cited fatigue as she pulled out of the upcoming Seoul Open.