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Taylor Fritz in action at Wimbledon.
June 8, 2026 By  ATP, Wimbledon

With Grass-Swing Brings the Pressure is On For Taylor Fritz

Throughout his career, Taylor Fritz has shown that he’s capable of competing on any surface. Even so, grass is different.

His serve, fast and typically well-placed, already gives him an advantage on the surface, and over the years he’s found a rhythm in the rest of his game that works especially well on the grass. He’s won five titles on grass and has made the quarterfinals of Wimbledon twice and the semifinals last year, and in general a good chunk of the points on his ranking tend to come from grass season.

But after a few injury-riddled months, Fritz’s past success on grass serves as both a blessing and a curse.

For Taylor Fritz, grass-court swing brings pressure

A Slow Start to 2026

Dealing with tendonitis in his knee all season, it hasn’t been the easiest run for Fritz. A fourth-round showing at the Australian Open and a run to the final in Dallas—where he lost after holding three championship points—were the highlights, but other than that the wins have been few and far between.

After a fourth-round loss in Miami, Fritz took a break and didn’t play for most of clay season. He came back at the very end for Geneva and the French Open, but didn’t win a match. The early Roland Garros loss may not be the worst thing for him, though, as it gave him two extra weeks to rest before grass season.

Fritz is still in the top 10 of the ATP rankings, but in the race he sits at #33. Much of the points holding his ranking up come from last year’s grass season, and now he has to defend them to stay at the top of the game.

1300 Points On The Line

Fritz is coming into grass season with 3720 ranking points. A third of those points came from the 2025 grass season.

It was an incredible run of form. Fritz kicked off his 2025 grass season campaign in Stuttgart, where he won the title without dropping a set. He suffered a close first-round loss in Queens, but bounced right back in Eastbourne. It was the polar opposite of his Stuttgart run, with almost every match going to three sets, but he pulled through nonetheless to win his fourth Eastbourne title. That was 500 points on the board, and he had room for more.

Wimbledon was just as much a testament to Fritz’s mental strength as it was to his grass court tennis. He very nearly lost in the first round, but came back from down two sets to love against Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard; including winning the fourth-set tiebreak from 5-1 down. He then won yet another five-setter in the second round against Gabriel Diallo, and from there he steadied out to make his first Wimbledon semifinal.

There, he lost to Carlos Alcaraz, but not without putting up a fight, taking a set and nearly sending the match to a fifth set. Fritz was undeniably one of the best players during the entire grass-court swing, and he came away with 1300 points to show for it.

But now, with a ranking to maintain, the pressure is on.

Can Fritz Replicate Past Success?

Like last year, Fritz is starting his grass campaign in Stuttgart, where he’s set to play his opening match against Martin Landaluce on Wednesday. From there, Fritz is signed up to play Halle and of course Eastbourne before heading to Wimbledon.

The time he took to rehab his knee during clay season could prove crucial, but if Fritz is still hampered by the injury then it can still affect his results. While he isn’t exactly known for being a strong mover, he’s had his movement completely compromised this season and that won’t bode well on grass. 

Arguably, grass is Fritz’s best surface. But this year, he’ll have to overcome extreme physical and mental pressure before he can get past any of his opponents.

Main photo credit: Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports

About Amanda Bergman

Writer with a passion for tennis. Covering all levels of the game for Last Word on Tennis, The Michigan Daily, and Aces & Faults.