Most HSBC Championship Titles (Men)

Table: From 1969 onward, List of Most London Open titles,
Queen’s Club Titles, HSBC Championship, ATP 500, England, Men, Tennis, Ranked.

ACTIVEPLAYERSTITLES
Andy Murray5
Lleyton Hewitt4
Andy Roddick4
John McEnroe4
Boris Becker4
Jimmy Connors3
AMatteo Berrettini2
AMarin Čilić2
Feliciano López2
Ivan Lendl2
Pete Sampras2
ACarlos Alcaraz2
AFrancisco Cerundolo (Current)1
ATommy Paul1
Rafael Nadal1
Sam Querrey1
Grigor Dimitrov1
Rod Laver1
Fred Stolle1
Stan Smith1
Ilie Năstase1
Raúl Ramírez1
Tony Roche1
Tim Mayotte1
Stefan Edberg1
Wayne Ferreira1
Michael Stich1
Mark Philippoussis1
Scott Draper1

2026 Finals Francisco Cerundolo rallied from a set and a break down to defeat Tommy Paul 6–7(4), 6–4, 6–3 in three hours and two minutes — the longest final in Queen’s Club history — claiming his first ATP 500 title and becoming the first Argentine to lift the trophy at The Queen’s Club.

Altitude London sits at approximately 11 meters (36 feet) above sea level, essentially at sea level. The dense air has no effect on ball speed or bounce, placing Queen’s Club among the most atmospherically neutral venues on the entire ATP and WTA calendar.

Humidity June in London brings mild but famously unpredictable British summer weather, with average temperatures between 12°C and 21°C (54°F–70°F). Humidity is consistently high, often above 70%, and the threat of rain is ever-present throughout both weeks of the tournament. Morning dew regularly delays the start of play, and overcast skies are the norm rather than the exception — conditions that keep the grass slightly softer and slower than drier grass venues like Stuttgart.

Outdoor Tournament The Queen’s Club Championships, established in 1969 as an ATP event, is one of the most historic and beloved tournaments on the grass-court calendar. Played outdoors at The Queen’s Club in West London, it serves as the premier Wimbledon warm-up event and consistently attracts the best grass-court players in the world. The tournament director is Jamie Murray, and the intimate centre court creates an almost collegiate atmosphere that players consistently cite as one of their favorite non-Grand Slam venues.

Surface Queen’s Club grass plays fast and low, with the ball skidding through quickly after the bounce. However, London’s higher humidity makes the courts fractionally slower and softer than Stuttgart or Halle, giving returners a slightly better chance than at drier grass venues. Serves are still dominant, but the conditions reward all-round grass-court ability — clean ball-striking, good movement, and the ability to handle pressure tiebreaks — making it the truest test of Wimbledon readiness on the pre-tournament schedule.