Ben Shelton capped his extraordinary week in Stuttgart in fitting style. The American defeated Taylor Fritz 6-4, 7-6 in Sunday's BOSS Open final to claim his first ATP title on grass, confirming the surge in form that has defined his entire tournament.
After saving two match points against Jiri Lehecka in the semifinals, Shelton delivered a far more controlled final. The American seized the initiative from the first set, breaking Fritz's serve at 4-3 with a biting backhand return. Fritz, the defending champion, never found a way to unsettle the left-hander in that opening set.
The second set was tighter. Fritz raised the level of his serve, delivering aces at crucial moments to stay in touch. No break fell despite both players' attempts. The tiebreak separated the two Americans, and Shelton used his raw power on the decisive points to convert his second match point and lift the trophy.
"My run here has been completely insane," Shelton said while holding the trophy aloft. "Down a set in four matches, two match points saved yesterday, and now this title. I don't even know how to explain it." The numbers speak for themselves. Four times trailing by a set, four times fighting back. A steel mentality forged through adversity all week long.
For Fritz, the defeat ends his Stuttgart reign. The world number nine had won the title in 2025 and hoped to become the first player to defend it since Federer. His serving game was not enough against Shelton's variety, with the left-hander punishing both on return and at the net.
The title arrives at the perfect time for Shelton's Wimbledon preparations. The American proved this week that he knows how to win on grass, even in the most unfavourable scenarios. The All England Club has been warned.

