Sam Querrey is in the Wimbledon quarterfinals for the third time in four years. His reward as he seeks to reach his first Grand Slam final? A match-up against 18-time major champion Rafael Nadal.
"It's going to just get harder and harder," the American said. "It's his least favorite place of the Slams — and he's 'finaled' it five times. And he's been rolling through guys."
Querrey hit 25 aces and saved all four break points he faced.
"I love playing here and I'm getting more comfortable every year. I like playing on the grass," Querrey said. "It's becoming more of a thing when I get here: I don't care so much who I'm playing, because I have just the confidence that I can make a run, regardless of who's in front of me."
Now comes Nadal, who won Wimbledon twice and was the runner-up three other times in a span of five appearances from 2006-11.
"I'm going to have to serve incredibly well, take my chances when I get them," Querrey said, "and, you know, hopefully I can have a good day out there."
"When he plays well, he can be very, very dangerous in all surfaces," Nadal said. "But, of course, in fast surfaces, when he serves with his aggressive game, maybe more."
Nadal never had a bit of trouble during his 6-2, 6-2, 6-2 victory over Joao Sousa of Portugal on Monday. Djokovic and Roger Federer also breezed through.
On Wednesday, Djokovic meets No. 21 David Goffin of Belgium, Federer plays No. 8 Kei Nishikori of Japan, and No. 23 Roberto Bautista Agut of Spain faces No. 26 Guido Pella of Argentina.
This is the 24th time the Big Three all reached the quarterfinals of a major tournament; one of them ended up with the title on 20 of the previous occasions.
"It's pretty incredible, their dominance. They don't seem to take a Slam off, rarely a Masters Series off," Querrey said. "They're engaged and focused — match-in, match-out — for 15 years."
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