Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz fired a Wimbledon warning as he comfortably beat Alex de Minaur 6-4 6-4 to claim the Queen’s Club title yesterday and return to world number one.
In baking temperatures, the 20-year-old had too much firepower for his wily Australian opponent as he claimed his first grasscourt title in impressive fashion.
It was only Alcaraz’s third tournament on grass, but the way he marched through the draw augurs well for his prospects at Wimbledon, where he will be seeded number one.
De Minaur, the first Australian to reach the London final since Lleyton Hewitt in 2006, had chances for a break of serve when leading 4-3 in the opening set but could not take them.
Alcaraz then broke serve in the following game before wrapping up the set on serve.
De Minaur double-faulted to hand over a service game early in the second set and there was no way the muscular Spaniard was going to pass up the opportunity to notch his fifth title of 2023.
Alcaraz is the fourth Spanish player to win the prestigious pre-Wimbledon tournament and will now hope to emulate Rafa Nadal who triumphed at Queen’s in 2008 before going on to win Wimbledon for the first time a few weeks later.
“So many legends have won here so to see my name on the trophy surrounded by great champions, it’s amazing,” reigning US Open champion Alcaraz said on court.
While Novak Djokovic remains the favourite to retain his Wimbledon title, Alcaraz will be the top seed at the tournament, where he reached the fourth round last year.
The way he has taken to grass, winning 10 sets in succession after losing his first of the week at Queen’s, should make him a serious contender at the All England Club.
“I started the week not too well, but I adapted my movement and I ended the week with a lot of energy,” he said.
As well as Nadal, several other players in recent times have gone on to win Wimbledon after conquering Queen’s Club, including Andy Murray in 2013 and 2016, Pete Sampras in 1995 and 1999, and Lleyton Hewitt in 2002. Boris Becker, then a teenager, also did the double in 1985 as a teenager.
Even 22-time Grand Slam champion Nadal took a while to adapt his game to grass, but the speed at which Alcaraz has looked at ease on the surface is astonishing.
De Minaur is one of the craftiest lawn players in the world but he could do nothing as Alcaraz showed great lawn skills, notably an impressive sliced backhand when required and a confidence around the net.
His forehand, meanwhile, was simply devastating, regularly clocking 90mph and drawing gasps from the crowd.

Bublik powers past Rublev to win first grass title in Halle
Kazakhstan’s Alexander Bublik battled his way past third seed Andrey Rublev 6-3 3-6 6-3 thanks to two service breaks to win the Halle Open title yesterday, his first on grass just over a week before the start of Wimbledon.
It was also the 26-year-old’s second tour title after his win in Montpellier in 2022.
Bublik, ranked 48th in the world, shot out of the blocks and snatched a break on Rublev’s very first service game to move 2-0 up.
With his booming serve proving impenetrable for his opponent Bublik quickly bagged the first set. Rublev, playing in his second Halle final in three years and looking to add to his Monte-Carlo title this season, got his revenge when he managed to convert his third break point of the match at 3-2.
He held serve to level but Bublik recovered and went a break up thanks to a superb backhand crosscourt winner at the start of the third set.
The Kazakh, who is no stranger to grass with two finals in Newport, did serve a dozen double faults throughout the match but finished it off in style, firing a second serve ace on his first match point to land his second tour title.

Kvitova warms up for Wimbledon with German title
Two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova beat Donna Vekic of Croatia 6-2 7-6(6) yesterday to lift the German Open title and confirm her form on grass just over a week before the Grand Slam in London.
The 33-year-old Czech, who also beat Vekic en route to victory at the Miami Open this year, earned her 31st career title.
The left-hander looked completely at ease on the surface as she captured her sixth title on grass, more than any other active WTA player, in a warning to her rivals ahead of Wimbledon.
It is the first time Kvitova has won multiple titles in a single season since 2019 and she has now won 12 of her last 13 matches on grass dating back to her title run in Eastbourne last season.
“I love grass, I love you,” Kvitova told a thinning crowd at the Steffi Graf stadium.
“I have to say big congrats to Donna.
“You played amazing tennis. Not only in the final but the whole week.
“wIt was exhausting yesterday and today,” she said.
Kvitova and Vekic had played twice on Saturday after a rain delay on Friday but it was the Czech who did not drop a set in the entire tournament.
She was too strong for the Croat in the first set, while the 26-year-old struggled with her forehand.
Kvitova found herself a break down early in the second set but battled back from 5-3 and moved 6-5 up with an ace.
Vekic, who has shot up the rankings from 69th to 23rd this season following an Australian Open quarter-final spot and a title in Monterrey, forced a tiebreak.
She was beaten, however, with a thundering Kvitova forehand on the first match point.