
Carlos Alcaraz delivered one of the most jaw-dropping moments of the Queen’s Club final with a point that defied belief. Facing Jiri Lehecka in a tense second-set tiebreak, Alcaraz turned defense into magic with a sequence that had the crowd on its feet.
After chasing down a delicate drop shot, Alcaraz was forced deep behind the baseline by Lehecka’s reply. With barely any time to reset, he launched a high, curling lob that somehow dropped just inside the baseline, leaving Lehecka stranded and the audience in disbelief.
The point was a perfect snapshot of Alcaraz’s athleticism and improvisation. On a surface where movement is notoriously tricky, his ability to cover the court with such speed and balance was nothing short of surreal. The crowd erupted, and even Lehecka could only smile in admiration.
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Carlos Alcaraz in 2025
42 – 9win/loss
2
High
1
22 year old
WWWWWWWWWW
Currently the world no.2, Alcaraz played his last match on the 1st of January 1970 when he beat world no.30 Jiri Lehecka 7-5 6-7(5) 6-2 in the final in London to win his 0th challenger.
At the moment, during this season Carlos has achieved a 42-5 win-loss record. Alcaraz has won 5 titles in 2025 in Rotterdam, Monte-Carlo, Rome, French Open and London. Alcaraz reached the final in Barcelona.
He is also scheduled to play in Wimbledon (Wimbledon). The main draw will start on the 30th of June.
Jiri Lehecka in 2025
25 – 15win/loss
30
High
22
23 year old
WLWWWWLWWL
Now ranked no.30, Lehecka played his last match on the 1st of January 1970 when he was defeated by world no.2 Carlos Alcaraz 7-5 6-7(5) 6-2 in the final in London (draw).
Presently, during this year Jiri has achieved a 24-13 match record. This year, the Czech clinched 1 title in Brisbane. Lehecka reached the final in London.
Carlos Alcaraz and Jiri Lehecka faced off 3 times. Their actual head to head record is 2-1 for Alcaraz.