After winning the Queen’s Club, only Wimbledon stands as Alcaraz’s main priority to win and stand tall in a repeat of his last year’s dominance. Of course, not everyone expected the Spanish star to stay hot, considering that he came off fresh from his Roland Garros triumph, and yet the star proved that he can win when it matters most.

At this point, it becomes easy to say that Alcaraz is definitely more suited to play in ever-changing surfaces. Now more than ever, there’s a lot of opponents coming in his way, but then he has silenced his critics, and he is going to keep it that way with the hopes of clinching Wimbledon for the second time around – and taking his shot at the world no. 1 spot as well.

Blowing past Jiri Lehecka for the ATP 500 trophy was a promising move and victory for Alcaraz, and it cannot be denied that he continues to prove that he is a lethal opponent on almost every single court. At this point, it is expected that he will likely be on the attack when it comes to Wimbledon, and he is definitely not going that far in his hopes of domination on the grass.

Dominating the Queen’s Club

Alcaraz dominated his path to the final of the HSBC Championships. He only dropped two sets en route to the title. If that was not enough to note that the star nearly had it easy, then nothing will ever be. So far, his poise in the game has been special, and Alcaraz’s dominance has certainly made it look even more special.

“I’m going to say it's really complicated, switching from clay to grass in just a few days, because that's the time I had before the tournament began. I had just two days of practising and then I had to compete here,” Alcaraz said. “So I came here with no expectations at all. I just came here with a goal to play two, three matches, trying to feel great on grass moving, and give myself the feedback of what I had to improve, what I had to do better.”

By the end of the tournament, Alcaraz looked poised to win it all without a doubt. He delivered a total of 18 aces in the final and did not lose in his final three matches of the week. He has been able to work on his closeout performances, and moving 2-1 in his head-to-head clash with Lehecka shows that incredible poise.

The Grass Favorite

Not only is Alcaraz a shining player on the clay courts at this point, but also a budding king in the grass. So far, this level of play has been impressive from the Spanish star, and he may well be on the rise for making it happen once more.

In fact, Alcaraz stands as the heavy favorite to win in Wimbledon – tied at +150 with Roland Garros finalist Jannik Sinner – who is also the current world no. 1. Novak Djokovic follows suit with +550, and Jack Draper lags behind at +1000.

So far, all signs point toward Alcaraz making a repeat win in Wimbledon, but the challenges are going to be different – and there are bigger stakes and implications at this one. It is clear that Alcaraz feels well at home whenever he takes on the grass courts, and this says a lot about his strong showing and what fans can expect at Wimbledon.