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Gordon Reid confident of claiming doubles crown at Queen’s

Gordon Reid is confident he and Alfie Hewett can fill a rare gap on their CVs as they aim to land the men’s wheelchair doubles crown at Queens.

The pair breezed past Asif Abbasi and Manojkanth Somasundaram 6-0 6-0 in the last four on Saturday and will face Joachim Gerard and Stephane Houdet for the right to lift the trophy.

“This is one of the few tournaments we haven’t won together, so it’s a good challenge for us,” Reid said.

“Looking ahead to Wimbledon, we want to be as best prepared as we can be, so this is another opportunity towards achieving that.”

The doubles is the only trophy Reid remains in contention for after being beaten by his partner in the singles, Hewett coming out on top 6-3 6-1 to set up a decider against defending champion Gerard.

Hewett said: “I think I am still learning at the moment. I have only played three matches on grass now this year, but I am enjoying it and I feel like I am in a good place physically.

“I am looking forward to a good challenge. He is probably one of the strongest players on grass because of his big serve and his long levers.”

In the men’s singles, Carlos Alcaraz is determined to head to Wimbledon as world No.1 after he sealed a first-ever grass court final with a straight sets victory over Sebastian Korda at Queen’s. 

Alcaraz will usurp Novak Djokovic at the rankings summit ahead of the third Grand Slam of the year if he beats Alex de Minaur in the final, after the Australian beat Holger Rune 6-3 7-6(2). 

De Minaur has been in superb touch all week in West London on the surface that he favours the most, while Alcaraz admitted earlier in the tournament that he is still adapting to grass. 

But the 20-year-old Spaniard, who also revealed he has been watching videos of Roger Federer and Andy Murray to improve his grass court game, was thrilled with his performance against the big-serving Korda, who knocked out British No.1 Cameron Norrie in the quarter-finals. 

“No doubt my best [performance] on grass,” he said. “I’m feeling great, I’m playing great. This is my third tournament on grass and I can feel the love from the crowd here. 

“It’s impossible to win these kinds of matches without the energy they bring to me. I am really happy to play my first final on grass, even more here at Queen’s. 

“I’m getting better every match that I play. Right now, I feel like I have been playing for ten years on grass. That is something crazy for me. I didn’t expect this and I am really happy about that. 

“At the beginning of the week, I didn’t know I could recover the No.1 [spot]. When I won yesterday, in the press conference they told me and it is extra motivation.  

“It is in my mind and I am going to go for it. Being top seed at Wimbledon, being the No.1, is the dream.” 

If Alcaraz is to head to make the short journey from W14 to SW19 top of the pile, he first must get past De Minaur, who beat world No.6 and second seed Rune in straight sets in the last four.

It continued De Minaur’s superb form so far in West London, with the 24-year-old easing past Murray and Diego Schwartzman before battling past Adrian Mannarino to reach the last four. 

And the world No.18 reiterated his love for the surface and expressed his desire to cap off an excellent week with a second ATP 500 title of his career following victory at the Mexican Open earlier this year. 

He said: “I just love being here, love playing on this court. I am very happy. 

“I play pretty decent on the grass and I am having an amazing week. I reckon this is my best match so far. 

“It is a pretty special tournament, so here’s hoping I can go one better tomorrow.” 

Hewitt, who won Wimbledon in 2002, is also a four-time champion at Queen’s and has long been a mentor figure for De Minaur, who admitted he would love to follow in his footsteps. 

“He [Hewitt] has played pretty decent here over the years,” said De Minaur. “He’s got a pretty good record. 

“I think I’m a little bit far away from that but I would love to be able to put my name on the trophy tomorrow. 

“He has been a huge mentor and he’s my Davis Cup captain, so he’s been messaging me this week as well. Hopefully I can keep it going.” 

For the latest action on the British summer grass court season, check out the LTA website

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