The 2024 grass season will get good early in Berlin, Birmingham, Halle and at the Queen's Club

One week after the Roland Garros finals, we’ve already reached the peak of the Wimbledon tune-up season.



The Break: Nadal Out Of Wimbledon2:07

Tennis doesn’t give its original surface, grass, much room to breathe. One week after the Roland Garros finals, we’ve already reached the peak of the Wimbledon tune-up season.

On the women’s side, that means Birmingham and Berlin; the latter features Aryna Sabalenka, Coco Gauff, and Naomi Osaka. On the men’s side, it means Halle and Queen’s Club. Once upon a time, Roger Federer would win Halle, Andy Roddick would win Queen’s, and the two would meet in the later rounds at Wimbledon. Might we see the same progression this year from Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner?

Before we get too far ahead of ourselves, here’s a look at this week's four grass tournaments. Enjoy the lawns while you can.

Terra Wortman Open (ATP)

You may know this tournament as the Gerry Weber Open, but the title sponsor is now German computer manufacturer Terra Wortman. Name aside, the money and the points are still good in Halle, and so is the draw. The 32-player field includes six of the ATP’s Top 11.

That list begins with newly-minted No. 1 Jannik Sinner. The Italian may not have the best memory of this event; he was forced to retire with an adductor strain in the quarterfinals last year. But that was the 2023 version of Sinner; this version is a very different animal so far. He’s reached a Wimbledon semifinal, won an Australian Open, and nearly made the Roland Garros final last week. But he won’t have an easy start against the steady, and steadily improving, Tallon Griekspoor.

Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner (C) attends a welcome ceremony in his home town with Sexten mayor Thomas Summerer, on June 11, 2024 in Sesto (Sexten) in the Dolomites, Italy. Sinner is the new and first ever Italian to be number one tennis player in the PIF ATP rankings. (Photo by Pierre TEYSSOT / AFP) (Photo by PIERRE TEYSSOT/AFP via Getty Images)
© PIERRE TEYSSOT / AFP

There isn’t much of a drop-off in stature after Sinner. The second seed is Alexander Zverev, a two-time Halle finalist who will look to win his first title on home grass. After that come 2022 finalist Daniil Medvedev, 2023 finalist Andrey Rublev, 2022 champion Hubert Hurkacz, Stefanos Tsitsipas, and 2023 champion Alexander Bublik.

Unseeded and beginning to loom: Matteo Berrettini. With another strong result in Stuttgart this week, the Italian has again come off the sidelines and wasted no time putting himself in the Wimbledon conversation.

First-round matches to watch: Sinner vs. Griekspoor, Hurkacz vs. Flavio Cobolli, Arthur Fils vs. Tomas Machac

Cinch Championships (ATP)

Halle has the No. 1, Sinner, so it’s only fair that Queen’s has the No. 2: Alcaraz. The Spaniard won his first career grass-court title here last year, and followed it up with his second at Wimbledon—not a bad opening, or second, act. This year Alcaraz, is coming in with the wind at his back, having just won his first Roland Garros.

He’ll have to hope that his momentum carries over to a new surface, because he’ll face a few challenges at Queen's. First from Francisco Cerundolo; second, possibly, from Stuttgart champion and home favorite Jack Draper; and third from Tommy Paul, who upset Alcaraz on hard courts in Canada last summer.

LONDON, ENGLAND - JUNE 16: Carlos Alcaraz of Spain signs autographs after practice prior to the cinch Championships at The Queen's Club on June 16, 2024 in London, England.  (Photo by Luke Walker/Getty Images for LTA)
© Getty Images for LTA

In 2023, Alcaraz beat Alex de Minaur in the final, and a rematch certainly seems possible. The Australian is seeded second, and just won a grass-court title in Holland. He’ll start against Lorenzo Musetti.

Also in the draw: Holger Rune, Andy Murray, Taylor Fritz, Ben Shelton, Sebastian Korda, Grigor Dimitrov

First-round matches to watch: Rune vs. Jordan Thompson, Milos Raonic vs. Cameron Norrie

Ecotrans Ladies Open (WTA)

Did this tournament feel like a bigger deal back when it was called the German Open, it was played on clay, it led into Roland Garros, and Steffi Graf was fending off stiff challenges from Monica Seles, Gabriela Sabatini and Arantxa Sanchez Vicario in successive finals? Probably. But sports needs sponsors, and this event has a new one in ecotrans, a German firm that “specializes in transport and logistics.”

Until a couple of days ago, it also had WTA No. 1 Iga Swiatek, but she pulled out to get some more rest before Wimbledon. That won’t torpedo this tournament, though, because it still includes Top 10 players Coco Gauff, Aryna Sabalenka, Elena Rybakina, Jessica Pegula, Marketa Vondrousova, Zheng Qinwen, Maria Sakkari and Ons Jabeur.

Wild cards of note: Naomi Osaka, Angelique Kerber

First-round matches to watch: Osaka vs. Zheng. Call it Grudge Match II. Zheng won round one earlier this year in Rome.

Plus: Sakkari vs. Azarenka

Rothesay Classic (WTA)

This WTA 250 in Birmingham rounds out the week. Jelena Ostapenko is the top seed, followed by Barbora Krejcikova, Sorana Cirstea and Nottingham champion Katie Boulter.

Also here: Karolina Pliskova. At 32 and ranked No. 50, she may sound like a name from the rapidly fading recent past, but she made a strong showing in Nottingham this week by reaching the final. Might more be in store from this former Wimbledon finalist?