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Tennis-Zverev finishes off Lehecka after wobble to reach quarter-finals

By Thomson Reuters Jul 7, 2026 | 11:22 AM

By Martyn Herman

LONDON, July 7 (Reuters) – Alexander Zverev worked a longer shift than he would have hoped for in the fierce heat as he returned to Centre Court on Tuesday to complete his fourth-round win over Jiri Lehecka and ​reach the Wimbledon quarter-finals for the first time.

The German second seed had gone ‌to bed the previous evening tantalisingly close to breaking new ground at Wimbledon, leading by two sets and 3-3 in the third under the roof when Wimbledon’s strict 11 p.m. curfew halted his progress.

On the resumption, a listless-looking Zverev lost 12 of the first 13 points to drop the third set as Lehecka ‌came ​out swinging but managed to refocus to win 6-4 7-5 ⁠3-6 7-6(6).

Zverev double-faulted on a ⁠second match point in the tiebreaker but was spared further overtime as 13th seed Lehecka netted a backhand to end the contest.

HUGE SERVE AND BASELINE POWER

His attempt to add the Wimbledon crown to his maiden Grand Slam title at last month’s French Open ​will continue with a heavy-metal last-eight clash with American Taylor Fritz.

“Who would have thought it’s only taken me 12 years to get (to my first Wimbledon quarter-final), but I’m incredibly ⁠happy and relieved. But of course I want ⁠to play three more matches.”

The 29-year-old had reached the fourth round on ​three previous occasions but despite boasting a serve that can trip the speed gun at 140 ​mph and heavy baseline power, the German has never looked as confident ‌on the lawns.

This year, buoyed by finally winning a Grand Slam title at the 41st attempt and with Wimbledon’s courts firmed up by the hot sunshine, Zverev is finally looking comfortable.

The powerful Lehecka presented a huge test but after finally getting on court around 9 p.m. ⁠on Monday, Zverev produced a clinical display and almost beat the clock.

Re-energised by the interruption, Lehecka began in stunning fashion on Tuesday and within minutes he had won the third set.

Zverev went ⁠back off court before the ‌start of the fourth set and re-established his rhythm on ⁠serve to keep Lehecka at bay. Zverev got ahead early in ​the tiebreak ‌but at 6-5 he double-faulted to hand Lehecka an escape route.

Lehecka ​could not ⁠take advantage of his reprieve though as Zverev booked a Wednesday date with Fritz — a player he has beaten on two of their three Wimbledon meetings despite an overall losing record to the American.

Asked what can be expected, Zverev said: “I don’t think it will be very entertaining because we both serve 140 mph and maybe there won’t be many rallies.”

(Reporting by Martyn Herman; ​Editing by Alison Williams)