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  1. Osaka holdspublished at 17:24 BST 7 July

    Osaka 6-7 (4-7) 2-1 Muchova*

    It was far from easy but Naomi Osaka comes through to hold.

    Karolina Muchova is a set up and looks the stronger of the two so far. But these things can change very quickly, which is why she'll be disappointed not to have converted that break opportunity.

  2. Osaka will 'have to dig deep'published at 17:23 BST 7 July

    Osaka 6-7 (4-7) 1-1 Muchova*

    Annabel Croft
    Former British number one on BBC Radio 5 Live

    I think Osaka feels out of control of it. If we think back to the match against Sabalenka, she was blasting the ball and it was coming at her a pace she feels comfortable with. Muchova is just completely disrupting that and as a player, you want to feel in control.

    She will have to dig deep for this one.

  3. Postpublished at 17:22 BST 7 July

    Osaka 6-7 (4-7) 1-1 Muchova*

    Harry Poole
    BBC Sport at Wimbledon

    Lots of love for Naomi Osaka here, and she receives another round of rousing cheers from the Court One crowd after going 0-30 down on serve.

    Her frustration is becoming more and more evident, though, as Karolina Muchova continues to be completely unfazed by any of that.

  4. Osaka saves break pointpublished at 17:22 BST 7 July

    Osaka 6-7 (4-7) 1-1 Muchova*

    Chance for Karolina Muchova!

    An excellent return at deuce, she comes in behind it but then dumps a relatively simple volley into the net.

    Naomi Osaka, who had found herself down 0-30, looks to the skies after sending a backhand long to take it back to deuce again and a searing forehand return from Muchova brings up break point.

    Osaka saves it with a hefty first serve.

    Naomi Osaka of Japan servesImage source, Getty Images
  5. Zverev 'did well to handle pressure'published at 17:21 BST 7 July

    Lehecka 4-6 5-7 6-3 6-6 (6-8) Zverev

    Marion Bartoli
    Former Wimbledon champion on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra

    It felt really difficult towards the end of the match. You could tell Zverev knew what the gameplan was. He did feel flatter than yesterday, he wasn't as dominant from the backcourt. I thought he did really well to handle the pressure after that double fault.

    It's reassuring to see him not go of the rails and just playing that solid tennis from the back of the court, good serving.

    He'll be pleased overall but will want to be more aggressive if he wants to continue in this tournament.

  6. When is Fery's quarter-final?published at 17:20 BST 7 July

    Media caption,

    GB's Fery stuns Dimitrov in five-set battle to reach quarter-finals

    Arthur Fery will be back on Centre Court on Wednesday for his Wimbledon quarter-final against French Open finalist Flavio Cobolli.

    The British wildcard will be involved in the second match on Wimbledon's showpiece court.

    Cobolli is the ninth seed at Wimbledon this year but Fery defeated him in the first round of the Australian Open in January.

    Centre Court (from 13:30 BST)

    • Marta Kostyuk v Jasmine Paolini
    • Flavio Cobolli v Arthur Fery

    Court One (from 13:00 BST)

    • Linda Noskova v Elise Mertens
    • Taylor Fritz v Alexander Zverev
  7. 'This place has always been challenging for him'published at 17:18 BST 7 July

    Lehecka 4-6 5-7 6-3 6-7 (6-8) Zverev

    Todd Woodbridge
    Former Wimbledon doubles champion on BBC One

    There is always a psychological barrier in the way for a player, which brings a little bit of nervous tension, and perhaps it was just that for Alexander Zverev.

    His goal has always been to reach a quarter-final here at Wimbledon and this place has always been challenging for him, so well done.

    It was a difficult reset for him, and we anticipated it would be because that is his pattern, but his serving was very good.

  8. Muchova holds to lovepublished at 17:17 BST 7 July

    *Osaka 6-7 (4-7) 1-1 Muchova

    After four breaks in a row to start the first set, there is no such drama in the second.

    A straightforward hold for Karolina Muchova, sealed with an ace out wide.

  9. What's happened so far today?published at 17:16 BST 7 July

    Media caption,

    Gauff completes comeback against Pegula to reach first Wimbledon semi-final

    • Jannik Sinner is two wins away from defending his Wimbledon title - the world number one beat Jan-Lennard Struff in straight sets to secure a semi-final spot.
    • Alexander Zverev was taken to four sets by Jiri Lehecka in a fourth-round match that was held over from Monday - the German will play Taylor Fritz in the quarter-finals on Wednesday.
    • Coco Gauff beat fellow American Jessica Pegula in a deciding set to reach the Wimbledon semi-finals for the first time in her career. Gauff, seeded seventh, is the highest seed left in the women's draw.
    • Great Britain's Henry Patten and Finnish partner Harri Heliovaara are into the men's doubles semi-finals, although the top seeds needed to win a deciding-set tie-break to progress.
    • Alfie Hewett and Andrew Penney won in the first round of the men's wheelchair singles but Gordon Reid and Ben Bartram were eliminated, while Lucy Shuker and Cornelia Oosthuizen lost in the women's event.
  10. 'A mighty effort'published at 17:15 BST 7 July

    Lehecka 4-6 5-7 6-3 6-7 (6-8) Zverev

    Chris Bradnam
    Commentator on BBC One

    Alexander Zverev has done it! He hasn't won the title, but he has won the battle of making the Wimbledon quarter-finals for the very first time. He has backed up his French Open triumph.

    You can see from his reaction that it was a mighty effort, but he is there.

  11. Osaka holdspublished at 17:14 BST 7 July

    Osaka 6-7 (4-7) 1-0 Muchova*

    Strong service game to start the second set for Naomi Osaka.

    That is just what the four-time major winner would have wanted.

  12. Postpublished at 17:13 BST 7 July

    *Osaka 6-7 (4-7) 0-0 Muchova

    Harry Poole
    BBC Sport at Wimbledon

    Naomi Osaka watches Karolina Muchova’s finishing forehand winner fly past her and quickly signals to the chair umpire that she’ll be leaving the court between sets.

    It’s been a great tournament so far for Osaka, but she is certainly not having it all her own way here and turning this around is going to require a huge effort.

    Muchova heads over to speak with her team, clearly not bothered at all by the still intense early evening sun.

  13. game, set and match

    Game, set and match - Zverevpublished at 17:12 BST 7 July
    Breaking

    Lehecka 4-6 5-7 6-3 6-7 (6-8) Zverev

    ZverevImage source, Getty Images

    Third time is the charm!

    A crestfallen Jiri Lehecka sends a backhand into the net.

    Second seed Alexander Zverev was made to work hard for that victory, having had to come back overnight.

    He lost the third set but did just enough in the fourth to avoid a decider and he'll now face American Taylor Fritz in the quarter-finals on Wednesday - Zverev's first ever Wimbledon last-eight appearance.

  14. Postpublished at 17:12 BST 7 July

    *Lehecka 4-6 5-7 6-3 6-6 (6-7) Zverev

    Todd Woodbridge
    Former Wimbledon doubles champion on BBC One

    What Alexander Zverev fails to capitalise on is the pressure he places on his opponents.

    It is there but he doesn't squeeze it, if you like.

  15. Match point Zverevpublished at 17:12 BST 7 July

    *Lehecka 4-6 5-7 6-3 6-6 (6-7) Zverev

    He will - a big serve forces Lehecka's return to go long.

    Match point number three...

  16. Postpublished at 17:10 BST 7 July

    Lehecka 4-6 5-7 6-3 6-6 (6-6) Zverev*

    Goodness! A double fault from Zverev! Two match points gone, will he get any more?

  17. Game and first set - Muchovapublished at 17:10 BST 7 July

    *Osaka 6-7 (4-7) 0-0 Muchova

    Karolina Muchova takes an absorbing first set on Court One.

    Great tennis from both players but Muchova just edges it. Superb ball striking and excellent returning.

    This has been so enjoyable to watch. Naomi Osaka has dropped a set for the first time at this year's championships but don't rule out a comeback just yet.

  18. Match pointpublished at 17:09 BST 7 July

    Lehecka 4-6 5-7 6-3 6-6 (5-6) Zverev*

    Lehecka into the net - gives Zverev match points.

    An ace saves one - but now the German can serve his way into the quarter-final...

  19. 'Zverev has just opened the door slightly'published at 17:08 BST 7 July

    Lehecka 4-6 5-7 6-3 6-6 (4-5) Zverev*

    Todd Woodbridge
    Former Wimbledon doubles champion on BBC One

    This is the interesting part of Alexander Zverev finishing matches. He has hung in well here throughout this set, he had the tie-break scoreline of 4-1 and he played it safely on his second serve. It allowed Jiri Lehecka to play a really solid point.

    Somebody like Novak Djokovic or Roger Federer would've shut that possibility down immediately. They wouldn't have offered up any momentum.

    He has just opened the door slightly with that point.

    Alexander Zverev of Germany servesImage source, Getty Images
  20. Postpublished at 17:08 BST 7 July

    *Lehecka 4-6 5-7 6-3 6-6 (4-5) Zverev

    Wow, this time a net cord works in Jiri Lehecka's favour as he slams a forehand into the top of the tape but it drops over the other side.

    And then the mini-break advantage disappears as Zverev hits a backhand into the net...