Tea anyone?
What happens when you put the sport's most explosive character inside tennis' English garden party? Occasionally, a little tea is going to be spilt.
From round to round, no one can predict with any great certainty how a Nick Kyrgios match will play out, even what the next minute will bring.
All that you can say is that if the Australian is ever going to win a Grand Slam singles title, that breakthrough will probably come right here on the grass, at the garden party.
And he knows that.
After all the drama of his five-setter against British wild card Paul Jubb in the opening round, Kyrgios was "locked in" for his second appearance, demolishing Queen's Club finalist Filip Krajinovic for the loss of just six games.
That was the world No.40 "reminding everyone I'm pretty good" and also taking himself through to play Greece's Stefanos Tsitsipas in what promises to be a compelling match.
If Kyrgios can play with poise and power again, beat the No.4 seed, and then keep that mood going for the rest of the Fortnight, it will take something special to stop him.
Iga for another meeting?
Qinwen Zheng is the Chinese teenager who took a set off Iga Swiatek in the fourth round of Roland-Garros, and who might have gone on to beat the world No.1 had she not been suffering with menstrual cramps.
Looking ahead, there's a chance that they could play for a second successive Grand Slam, with a possible quarter-final meeting.
But first the 19-year-old-must come through her third round encounter with Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan.
Finding form
Paula Badosa's preparations for The Championships weren't ideal, with the Spaniard losing on her first appearance in Eastbourne to British wild card, Jodie Burrage.
That was her only match on grass before arriving at the All England Club.

But the No.4 seed has found some form here and has made it through to the last 32 where she plays Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic, the 2011 and 2014 Wimbledon champion and also the winner in Eastbourne last week.
Heading for Harmony
Emotions are running high for Katie Boulter, a British wild card whose grandmother passed away a few days ago.
She dedicated her second round victory over Czech Karolina Pliskova, last year's runner-up, to her grandmother, whose favourite tournament was Wimbledon and "who would watch every single match that was on TV".

Boulter's efforts to "try to keep my head in the tennis" have propelled her into the third round of a Grand Slam for the first time.
Her next opponent, Frenchwoman Harmony Tan, has already had a big win of her own here, defeating Serena Williams in the first round.
New territory
Like Boulter, Liam Broady is a British wild card who had never reached the third round of a Grand Slam before this week.
That all changed when the world No.132 came from two sets to one down to defeat Argentina's Diego Schwartzman, the No.12 seed.
At one stage, it appeared as though Broady was going to play another Briton next, with Jack Draper taking the opening set against Alex de Minaur, but then the Australian, Boulter's boyfriend, came back to win in four.
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