Brilliant Fearnley beats Moutet to reach Queen's last eight
Britain's Fearnley into Queen's quarter-final - best shots
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Britain's Jacob Fearnley produced a hugely impressive display to see off mercurial French qualifier Corentin Moutet at Queen's and reach a first ATP Tour quarter-final.
Edinburgh-born Fearnley battled to a 6-3 2-6 6-2 win on the Andy Murray Arena to set up a meeting with Czech Jiri Lehecka in the last eight.
The match looked to be getting away from Fearnley after a dominant start as Moutet - who stunned world number four Taylor Fritz in the opening round - swept through the second set.
But Fearnley dug in with an impressive third-set display as the fiery Moutet lost his cool - not for the first time - and hit a ball into the stands after being broken by the 23-year-old.
Backed by the vocal home crowd, Fearnley upped the aggression on the court to secure a fine victory.
"It's really special for me, I've dreamed of these moments since I was a young boy," Fearnley said.
"It's even better to do it here in the UK - to do it here in front of this crowd and on this court is unbelievable."
Later, top seed and world number two Carlos Alcaraz joined Fearnley in the last eight with a battling 6-4 6-7 (7-9) 7-5 win over Spanish compatriot Jaume Munar.
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Fearnley continues impressive rise
Fearnley has enjoyed a meteoric rise in the last 12 months, rising from outside the top 500 to now sitting at 60th in the world.
This was just his sixth tour-level match on grass but it did not look like it as he played some brilliant tennis at times that Moutet had no answer for.
The British number two came back from 0-40 down in his first service game of the match before immediately breaking Moutet to take control of the opener.
It looked like a straightforward afternoon for Fearnley as Moutet grew increasingly irked but the Frenchman regained his composure to dominate the second set, the momentum swinging after three double faults by the Scot in his first service game.
However, Fearnley found an extra level in an excellent third set and Moutet had no answer to his big hitting, with his frustrations boiling over as he received a time violation after arguing with the umpire.
But Fearnley kept his composure well to serve out victory and join compatriot and British number one Jack Draper in the last eight.
"I tried to stick to my game plan and be aggressive,” he added. “I did that better in the third set and the result speaks for itself.
"It's really special to have everyone here and watch me play on this stage."
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