Wimbledon seeds: Roger Federer 1, Rafael Nadal 2, Alexander Zverev 4 - the FULL list
WIMBLEDON seeds - Roger Federer is No.1, Rafael Nadal No.2 - the full list of Wimbledon seeds.
Halle Open: Federer plays stunning backhand against Ebden
WIMBLEDON SEEDS
2) Rafael Nadal
3) Marin Cilic
4) Alexander Zverev
5) Juan Martin del Potro
6) Grigor Dimitrov
7) Dominic Thiem
8) Kevin Anderson
9) John Isner
10) David Goffin
11) Sam Querrey
12) Novak Djokovic
13) Milos Raonic
14) Roberto Bautista Agut
15) Diego Schwartzman
16) Nick Kyrgios
17) Borna Coric
18) Lucas Rouille
19) Jack Sock
20) Fabio Fognini
21) Pablo Carreno Busta
22) Kyle Edmund
23) Adrian Mannarino
24) Richard Gasquet
25) Kei Nishikori
26) Hyeon Chung
27) Philipp Kolschreiber
28) Denis Shapovalov
29) Damir Dzumhur
30) Filip Krajinovic
31) Marco Cecchinato
32) Fernando Verdasco
Roger Federer has missed out on the chance to win his 100th career title at Wimbledon next month after losing the Gerry Weber Open final.
Federer is on 98 wins and looked a strong bet for 99 in a traditional stronghold in Halle, but was beaten 7-6 (8/6) 3-6 6-2 by Croatian Borna Coric.
It ends a 20-match winning streak on grass and also means Rafael Nadal will replace Federer, who was chasing a 10th title at Halle, at the top of the world rankings.
However, Federer is still seeded No.1 for Wimbledon while Rafael Nadal is No.2.
Federer has not been at his best throughout the week, having to save match points in his second-round match, but sent it to a decider after one break proved enough for the second set.
The smart money would have been on the Swiss to complete a comeback, but it was the 21-year-old who prevailed, breaking Federer twice to take it 6-2.
Marin Cilic outlined his credentials as a potential Wimbledon champion by winning a second title at Queen's.
The No.1 seed fought off a match point to defeat Novak Djokovic 5-7 7-6 (7/4) 6-3 in a gruelling two hours and 57 minutes in the Fever-Tree Championships final.
It earns Cilic redemption for his final defeat to Feliciano Lopez here 12 months ago and is the second time he has lifted the trophy after he first won it in 2012 - when David Nalbandian defaulted by kicking an advertising board.
He will be seeded three at Wimbledon and will now be among the firm favourites for SW19, which starts on July 2, after a faultless week in west London.
Djokovic will also be well fancied for a fourth title at Wimbledon but his trophy drought now goes beyond a year - the longest time between titles in his career.
It was something of a return to form for the 12-time grand slam champion this week, though, and he could easily have won in what was his 99th career final, but missed that match point in the second set.