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Andy Murray suffers comprehensive first-round Queens defeat to Alex de Minaur

World No 18 Alex de Minaur defeats Andy Murray in straight sets, 6-3 6-1, to knock the Scot out at the first round of Queens in a major blow to his Wimbledon hopes; top seed Carlos Alcaraz survived a scare to defeat French journeyman Arthur Rinderknech to book passage through at Queens

Image: Great Britain's Andy Murray was beaten 6-3 6-1 by Australia's Alex de Minaur in the first round at Queens

Andy Murray suffered a chastening first-round defeat against Alex de Minaur at Queens.

The five-time Queen's Club winner paid for an error-strewn, irritable performance as he slipped to a 6-3 6-1 defeat against the Australian seventh seed.

Murray had won 10 matches in a row in claiming back-to-back grass-court titles in Surbiton and Nottingham.

But Australian seventh seed De Minaur - the world No 18 - was a major step up in class and probably one of the trickiest first-round opponents Murray could have drawn.

The 24-year-old certainly knew his way around a grass court; he is a former Eastbourne champion and reached the fourth round at Wimbledon last year.

He was simply too strong for Murray, sending him spinning to a defeat which means, barring an unlikely raft of withdrawals, that he will not be seeded at Wimbledon next month.

Murray probably needed to reach the quarter-finals at least to have a chance of being one of the top 32 players at SW19, but now the two-time champion - currently ranked 38 - is at risk of facing one of the big guns in the early rounds.

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Murray's appearance in the singles may have been fleeting, but tournament organisers will at least be relieved he has opted to play doubles with British No 1 Cameron Norrie; they face Joe Salisbury and Rajeev Ram on Wednesday evening.

"Obviously after [Tuesday], it's easy to overreact," said Murray, who has resurrected his career after hip resurfacing surgery. "I lost to a good player and it was obviously very comfortable.

Great Britain's Andy Murray during his match against Portugal's Nuno Borges during day six of the Rothesay Open 2023 at the Nottingham Tennis Centre. Picture date: Saturday June 17, 2023.
Image: Murray came into the match on the back of winning back-to-back grass court titles at the Surbiton Trophy and Nottingham Open

"But at the same time, over the past couple of weeks, yes, it's obviously not the same level of opponents, but I won the [Nottingham Open] last week without dropping a set.

"I only lost one set in Surbiton. Was holding serve very comfortably. Was moving well, hitting the ball well. There are a lot of positive signs there."

Alcaraz survives scare to beat France's Rinderknech

The organisers were breathing a sigh of relief earlier on Tuesday when Carlos Alcaraz survived a scare.

The top seed and world number two insisted he can challenge on the grass this summer despite needing a third-set tie-break to beat French journeyman Arthur Rinderknech.

The 20-year-old was playing only his seventh match on the surface, and his first outside of Wimbledon.

Carlos Alcaraz (Associated Press)
Image: Carlos Alcaraz survived a scare to book passage through at Queens

Lucky loser Rinderknech only found out he was playing the Spaniard shortly before midday after fellow Frenchman Arthur Fils, Alcaraz's scheduled opponent, withdrew from the tournament.

But the 27-year-old almost knocked the headline act out, taking the first set and giving Alcaraz an uncomfortable afternoon before going down 4-6 7-5 7-6 (3) in just over two-and-a-half hours.

Alcaraz, the US Open champion who was playing his first match since losing to Novak Djokovic in the semi-finals at Roland Garros, said: "It has been a really tough match, he has played four or five matches on the grass and this was my first one.

"It was really difficult to adapt my game to the grass. For me it's tough to play here, but Queen's is a tournament I really wanted to play.

"I couldn't play tennis on grass at home but I practised the movement on grass. I practised here a little bit before the tournament and I felt really good, even though it was the first match.

"I would say I'm going to be better in the next round."

Britain's Liam Broady was denied a notable win after world No 46 Adrian Mannarino came from a set down to win in three.

Broady, ranked 97 places behind the Frenchman at 143, raced away with the first set but was pegged back in a 1-6 6-4 6-3 defeat.

Fellow Brit Ryan Peniston - who beat Ugo Humbert on Monday - will face second seed Holger Rune in round two after the Danish youngster won 7-6 (4) 7-6 (3) against Maxime Cressy for his first career victory on grass.

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