Eastbourne's Wednesday card is stronger than a normal ATP 250 round-of-16 day because the official ATP Tour schedule clusters several meaningful grass indicators together. Taylor Fritz faces Jan Choinski, Jack Draper returns against Jack Pinnington Jones and the rest of the card keeps the event anchored as one of late June's most useful reads before Wimbledon.
Fritz gives the day its clearest reference point. The ATP schedule confirms the top seed's second-round slot, and Eastbourne's tournament history page underlines how strong his record has been at this stop. That alone makes his match relevant beyond one result, because proven grass specialists can shift outright and next-round pricing very quickly once they settle into a week.
Draper adds a different kind of tension. ATP's Monday report confirms he returned with a win in Eastbourne, so Wednesday is no longer about opening his grass season. It is about whether he can build immediate continuity in front of a home crowd. For bettors, that is exactly why this card matters before the sport's biggest grass fortnight begins.