Bye for nowpublished at 22:14 British Summer Time 30 June 2022
Thanks for following along today - it was a thrilling day with some big British wins to savour.
See you tomorrow morning when we'll do it all again. Night!
GB's Katie Boulter comes from set down to stun sixth seed Karolina Pliskova 3-6 7-6 (7-4) 6-4
Heather Watson matches her best Wimbledon singles performance by beating China's Wang Qiang in straight sets
Liam Broady produces a stunning display to beat 12th seed Diego Schwartzman in five sets
Second seed Rafael Nadal beats Ricardas Berankis in four sets to reach round three
GB's Jack Draper beaten in four sets by Australia's Alex de Minaur
Stefanos Tsitsipas beats Jordan Thompson in straight sets
Britain's Alastair Gray beaten 6-3 7-6 (7-3) 6-3 by 11th seed Taylor Fritz
Harriet Dart beaten in three sets by eighth seed Jessica Pegula
GB's Joe Salisbury & partner Rajeev Ram through to second round
Men's 17th seed Roberto Bautista Agut of Spain has withdrawn after positive Covid-19 test
Michael Emons, Gary Rose, Michael Beardmore and Matt Gault
Thanks for following along today - it was a thrilling day with some big British wins to savour.
See you tomorrow morning when we'll do it all again. Night!
Ready for some more? Of course you are. Here's tomorrow's menu, which features Novak Djokovic, Ons Jabeur and Cameron Norrie, to name a few.
Centre Court (from 13:30 BST)
Court One (from 13:00 BST)
Right, it's been another jam-packed day, so here's a neatly packaged round-up for you.
Harry Poole
BBC Sport at Wimbledon
Imagine the scene.
You've just broken serve to move one game away from your first ever Grand Slam third round appearance.
And then? Rain.
That was Australian Jason Kubler's day. He'll have to return to serve out his second round match tomorrow, leading 6-3 6-4 5-4 against Austrian Denis Novak, who appears to be the one person to benefit from today's downpour.
One other men's second-round match is still to be completed. American Jack Sock leads compatriot Maxime Cressy 6-4 6-4.
Other than that, it's on to round three in the singles draws!
606 phone-in
BBC Radio 5 live
JM: Our athletes are going to different sports. One of my goals is to get as many kids the opportunity to play this sport and now I think you’re seeing some fantastic kids and you will see some make the breakthrough.
De Minaur's ball striking was truly exceptional there, and with Liam Broady fresh off the biggest win of his career, their third-round encounter promises to be nothing short of spectacular.
Can't wait for that one.
"Before we talk about my match, can we just talk about Katie Boulter today?," asks Alex De Minaur, referring to his partner's win over Karolina Pliskova on Centre.
606 phone-in
BBC Radio 5 live
JM: His chances – best he has ever had. Playing Tsitsipas who is trying to prove himself on grass too. I don’t want to say never but this is the best chance he has had.
I would love to coach Nick but you have got to want to be coached. I like him a lot – he’s a great kid. He moves the needle. You have to go out there and give it your best and things will happen
De Minaur 5-7 7-6 (7-0) 6-2 6-3 Draper
De Minaur's reward is another match against a Brit: Liam Broady, who took out 12th seed Diego Schwartzman earlier.
Jonathan Jurejko
BBC Sport at Wimbledon
No wonder Nick Kyrgios was a little quieter than usual today.
As well as allowing him to win comfortably against Filip Krajinovic, it also meant his bank account won't take another hit.
Wimbledon has just revealed the fines list from the opening few days and the Australian is going to be US$ 10,000 (£8,200) lighter for his antics in his opening match against Paul Jubb.
That included spitting in the direction of what he called a "disrespectful" spectator at the end of an eventful five-set victory.
He also was critical of the line judges and spectators throughout his opener - even asking the umpire to remove people from the crowd.
De Minaur 5-7 7-6 (7-0) 6-2 6-3 Draper
Jack Draper sends a tired shot way too deep and Alex De Minaur breaks to seal an impressive four-set victory over the Brit on Court One!
Draper looked hugely impressive at times and certainly contributed to the entertainment, but De Minaur's experience at this level told in the end.
A great match to watch.
De Minaur 5-7 7-6 (7-0) 6-2 5-3 Draper*
Draper double faults and it's 30-30 in a potentially decisive game.
A Draper forehand is called out but he challenges and Hawkeye shows it's in!
They replay the point but De Minaur remains unfazed and brings up match point.
Jonathan Jurejko
BBC Sport at Wimbledon
That was the first time since he was broken for 3-1 in the third set that the De Minaur serve was taken to 30 by Draper.
The Australian's roar of 'Come on!' which greeted the Brit clubbing long at 30-30 was met by almost deafening silence by the thousands of other in here.
The ace which followed was also met by a gleeful shout, plus a bit more vocal support from the Aussies who are also here.
De Minaur 5-7 7-6 (7-0) 6-2 5-3 Draper*
De Minaur just won't let up and he holds yet again to drive another nail into Draper's coffin.
The Brit will serve to stay in the match.
*De Minaur 5-7 7-6 (7-0) 6-2 4-3 Draper
De Minaur loses his footing and Draper volleys to go 30-30. Big roar from the crowd!
Can he get the break?
Feat. Tim Henman & Naomi Broady
606 phone-in
BBC Radio 5 live
Q: What do the panel think of Emma Raducanu and should she take time off the tour and have a complete reset instead of this current circle of woe:
JM: She is currently 11 in the world and she’s a GS winner. That should tell people around her that she is one of the best players in the world so why would she pull back and start over?But with four different coaches in the last year – seems strange – on superstition alone I wouldn’t do that.
NB: This was never going to be easy for her. First person to come through qualifying and not drop a set. It is not possible to do that by fluke.
Her rankings is going to drop anyway and she will be playing slightly lower levels of tournaments, it will balance back out, she will get more matches and the target will be off her back.
TH: The key will be physical resilience. She has got to be getting fitter, stronger, faster and give herself the opportunity. Also patience. She is going to be a phenomenal player.
*De Minaur 5-7 7-6 (7-0) 6-2 4-3 Draper
Back-to-back aces for Draper. That'll help. 40-0.
He sends a tired-looking shot long to give De Minaur hope but closes out his service game.
Still, he needs to break the Aussie's serve which, over the last hour or so, has looked utterly impenetrable.
Jonathan Jurejko
BBC Sport at Wimbledon
The excitable home fans aren't giving this one up just yet.
Ear-splitting noise as Draper holds serve. Drums might need to be covered if he manages to break.
Whatever you think of the late-night sessions under the floodlights, you can't deny they create an incredible atmosphere.
Sounds amplifies like a cough in a cave under the roof.
De Minaur 5-7 7-6 (7-0) 6-2 4-2 Draper*
Court One found its voice after that Draper hold but De Minaur is determined to silence it once more.
A hold to 15 and he's two games away from the third round.
*De Minaur 5-7 7-6 (7-0) 6-2 3-2 Draper
Biiiig hold from Draper. Oh how he needed that.