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Alex de Minaur shares how Katie Boulter’s Queen’s run has affected him as he reaches the quarter-finals

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Katie Boulter reached the semi-finals of the Queen’s Club Championships a week ago.

The Briton secured the biggest win of her career in the quarter-finals, when Boulter knocked out Elena Rybakina, the world number two.

Who is currently the best grass-court player on the WTA Tour?

This week, it’s her fiancé’s turn to challenge at Queen’s, as Alex de Minaur searches for his second title of the season.

De Minaur has now shared how Boulter’s run to the semis affected him.

Alex de Minaur knows he will ‘never hear the end of it’ if he can’t match Katie Boulter’s Queen’s performance

During his latest press conference, De Minaur was asked what it’s like when he and Boulter make deep runs at the same time.

“Oh, it’s amazing,” he said.

“I think it brings out the best in each other.

“We kind of have a little bit of that competitive nature in us where we both want to do better than each other, and it just kind of, yeah, brings out a healthy competition.

Alex de Minaur pictured at Queen's in 2026.
Photo by Luke Walker/Getty Images for LTA

“Now that I’m playing here at Queen’s, I’ve got to do my best to kind of try and at least match her performance, because if not, I’ll never hear the end of it.

“So that’s my drive and motivation. Let’s say that.”

Katie Boulter at Queen’s (2026)

De Minaur has made a strong start to his Queen’s Club Championships campaign as he looks to match Boulter.

The Aussie won his opener against Gabriel Diallo in straight sets, 7-6, 6-3.

He then beat another Canadian, Denis Shapovalov, in the second round, 6-4, 6-1.

If he wins his next match against Brandon Nakashima, he will advance to the semis, just as his fiancée, Boulter, did a week ago.

De Minaur is the top seed at Queen’s, and unlike Boulter, entered the competition as one of the favourites to lift the title.

Alex de Minaur’s Queen’s Club Championships draw

RoundHighest-ranked potential opponentPotential seeded opponentsPotential unseeded opponents
1RGabriel Diallo (84)
2RDenis Shapovalov (41)
QFBrandon Nakashima (32)
SFFrancisco Cerundolo (27)[7] Francisco CerundoloArthur Fery
FJiri Lehecka (12)[1] Jiri Lehecka, [4] Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, [8] Tommy PaulBotic van de Zandschulp, Corentin Moutet, Hamad Medjedovic, Ugo Humbert, Rinky Hijikata
Alex de Minaur’s Queen’s Club Championships draw

If he gets past Nakashima, De Minaur will play Argentina’s Francisco Cerundolo or Great Britain’s Arthur Fery in the last four.

The 27-year-old is in with a great chance of making his second consecutive final, having finished as the runner-up in the Netherlands last week.

Alex de Minaur and Kamil Majchrzak pictured after the Libema Open final.
Photo by Iris van den Broek / ANP / AFP via Getty Images

De Minaur will be keen to remind everyone of his grass-court credentials by picking up his first title on the surface since 2024 in Queen’s.

Alex de Minaur is finding form at the right time ahead of Wimbledon

After a strong start to the year, where De Minaur reached the Australian Open quarter-finals and won the Rotterdam Open, he began to struggle.

He lost his opening matches in Acapulco, Miami, Madrid, and Rome, and only reached one clay-court semi-final, at the Hamburg Open.

Those results saw De Minaur lose ground in the ‘Live ATP Race to Turin’, with others excelling on the clay.

Still, he sits inside the top eight, thanks to his run to the final in ‘s-Hertogenbosch and to the quarter-finals of Queen’s.

Live ATP Race to Turin

RankNameCountryPoints
1Jannik SinnerItaly5,950
2Alexander ZverevGermany5,090
3Carlos AlcarazSpain3,650
4Flavio CobolliItaly2,620
5Daniil MedvedevRussia2,420
6Ben SheltonUSA1,970
7Arthur FilsFrance1,890
8Alex de MinaurAustralia1,870
9Jakub MensikCzechia1,855
10Felix Auger-AliassimeCanada1,790
Live ATP Race to Turin

With Wimbledon right around the corner, De Minaur looks like a contender again, and that’s great news for the Aussie and his many fans.

De Minaur has never been past the quarter-finals of a Grand Slam tournament, but perhaps this year will be different.

He has work to do before Wimbledon, though, as he prepares to take on Nakashima in the Queen’s quarter-finals on Friday, June 19.