The 2026 grass season is drawing to a close. In 48 hours, the spotlight shifts to the All England Club. Before Wimbledon reshuffles the deck, a look back at three weeks of grass-court tennis that have shaped the balance of power.
On the men's side, the surprise wears an American flag. Frances Tiafoe captured the Halle title by defeating Taylor Fritz 6-4, 6-4 in the final, becoming the first American to lift this trophy. Offensive, fearless tennis, driven by a serve firing on all cylinders. At 28, Tiafoe appears to have cracked the grass-court code and arrives at Wimbledon with a confidence rarely seen from him.
At Queen's, Francisco Cerúndolo provided the storyline. The Argentine, better known for his clay-court exploits, beat Tommy Paul 6-7(4), 6-4, 6-3 in the final to claim his first grass-court title. A gutsy victory, snatched after dropping the opening set, proving that modern tennis no longer respects surface boundaries. On the women's side at Queen's, dispatched 6-0, 7-6(6), delivering a punishing first set to the home favourite.
The following week confirmed some trends and shook up others. joined Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova in Eastbourne's hall of fame by claiming a third title in Sussex. At 31, the American displays remarkable consistency on grass, powered by a forehand that wreaks havoc on fast surfaces.
At Bad Homburg, claimed the title after retired in the final (6-1, 1-0 ret.). The Czech, an artist of touch and variation, looks tailored for success on London's lawns. Her unbeaten run this week sends a strong signal.
On the concern side, several names arrive at Wimbledon with question marks. Osaka leaves Germany nursing a foot issue that raises doubts. Raducanu, beaten heavily in the Queen's final and then spotted cutting short a training session, carries persistent physical concerns. , the defending Wimbledon champion, fell in the quarterfinals at Bad Homburg to , raising questions about her grass-court adaptation after an intense Roland-Garros.
stands as the other major positive from this preparation period. The Frenchman, faithful to his counter-punching and serve-and-volley style, reached the Eastbourne final by eliminating in the semifinals. Humbert confirms his status as one of the most comfortable grass-court players on the current tour.
The bigger picture paints an open Wimbledon. On the men's side, defends his title without having played a grass-court warm-up event, opting instead for a targeted training block after his physical struggles at Roland-Garros. , the 2024 champion, remains the gold standard for attacking tennis. Tiafoe, Humbert and add further uncertainty. On the women's side, Keys and Muchová arrive in full flight, while Świątek and Osaka carry doubts. All the ingredients are in place for an unpredictable Wimbledon.

