Jannik Sinner continued his perfect start to Wimbledon as he cruised into the third round with a straight-sets win over Aleksandar Vukic on Thursday.
The world number one dropped just five games in the second round as he took just one hour and 40 minutes to prevail 6-1 6-1 6-3.
Vukic held on his first service game, and though he forced a break point on Sinner's next serve, the Italian successfully defended it to race through the first set with a five-game winning streak.
Sinner started the second set with intent, going a break up in the first game, and though Vukic pulled back to 2-1, he could not gain any momentum. Sinner dropped only two more points in the set to put himself on the brink.
Vukic impressed at the start of the third set, holding his nerve to keep the score level until 3-3, having also forced two break points which he could not convert.
Sinner got the vital break in the eighth game, and though he failed to convert his first five match points, he eventually clinched the match on his sixth to set up a meeting with Pedro Martinez in the next round.
While Sinner made light work of his second-round match, Jack Draper became the latest big-name exit as he was knocked out by Marin Cilic.
The home favourite, who was the fourth seed, was overwhelmed throughout the two-hour and 39-minute clash, with former Wimbledon finalist Cilic triumphing 6-4 6-3 1-6 6-4.
Since the rankings were first published in 1973, Cilic (36 years and 275 days) has become the third-oldest player to defeat an ATP top-five opponent at Wimbledon, after Ken Rosewall and Roger Federer.
It means that Draper's wait to reach the third round for the first time in his career stretches on after he struggled to cope with Cilic's dominance on serve.
Data Debrief: Sinner maintains seamless start
So many of the top seeds have already fallen at Wimbledon in the opening four days, but Sinner never looked in doubt of reaching the third round.
Among top seeds at the event, Sinner (12 games) has conceded the fewest games over the opening two rounds of the men's singles at Wimbledon since Roger Federer (nine games) in 2004.
Since the rankings were first published in 1973, Sinner (91.0%, 61-6) only trails Bjorn Borg (91.9%) for winning percentage while holding the ATP number one ranking.