Heather Watson blasted past former world number five Daniela Hantuchova in straight sets to book a potential third-round Wimbledon clash with 20-time grand slam champion Serena Williams.
British number one Watson dispatched Czech star Hantuchova 6-4 6-2 to equal her best-ever showing at SW19 by reaching the third round.
Watson was forced to rally after a flat start for a three-set victory over Caroline Garcia in the first round, but needed no such psyching up amid Wimbledon’s hottest day of all time.
The 23-year-old admitted winding herself up to find the “controlledaggression” to move past Garcia, in a clash that spanned two days owing to badlight on Monday night.
Watson sustained that high-tempo approach against world number 46 Hantuchova, deservedly progressing – and comfortably so in the end.
Barring the biggest upset of the tournament so far, Watson will now meet Serena Williams in the third round, the American gunning for tennis’ Holy Grail, the calendar grand slam.
Williams must first dispose of Hungary’s Timea Babos, the pair’s second-round clash slated for Centre Court’s final action on Wednesday.
“I’m really looking forward to playing Serena; I’ve never played her before,” Watson told the BBC.
“She’s an amazing champion, athlete and competitor.
“It won’t be easy, but I’m really looking forward to playing her at Wimbledon.
“I definitely kept my cool better in this match today; I was a lot calmer.
“I didn’t panic, I hit a few double faults to give it away but just stayed calm and kept playing my game, and it brought me back.”
Williams already boasts the Australian and French Open titles and is the hot favourite to claim her sixth Wimbledon crown.
Watson has only reached the third round once before, in 2012, and as the world number 64 would doubtless assume the underdog mantle against Williams.
The ambitious and driven Brit’s ranking has peaked at 38 so far in her career, but has widely been tipped to crack the top 20.
So there would be no doubt Watson would relish a first meeting with one of the game’s modern greats.
Watson started brightly, doubtless keen to shrug off any of the malaise she felt gifted Garcia the first set in their first-round meeting.
Both ladies held serve in a solid start before Watson produced three double-faults to hand Hantuchova the initiative.
Refusing to allow the jitters to set in though, Watson broke straight back, before breaking again at the very next opportunity to take control of the set.
Turning the set on its head in a flash allowed Watson the confidence to serve out and take a one-set lead without any real issues.
Watson then never allowed the rest of the match to become a contest, dominating Hantuchova at almost every turn in the second set.
The British hope broke her Czech adversary straight away, only to drop her own serve the next game. But after that she fired right back, breaking twice in succession before serving out for victory.