Jiri Lehecka was in the midst of having his best year in tennis. Alexander Zverev might have been, too, after winning his first Grand Slam title at the French Open. When the two players met in the fourth round of Wimbledon, something had to break.
Zverev, after all, had never made it past the fourth round at the grass-court major. Lehecka, it should be noted, hadn't either, but the German had spent many more years near the top of the tennis rankings. Lehecka is still trying to find his way.
The odd part is that both players' games seemed to translate well to grass. Both serve well and also move around the court with ease. Each has shown the ability to volley well. Neither has yet won a grass-court tournament on the ATP tour, however.
Alexander Zverev defeats Jiri Lehecka in the fourth round of Wimbledon 2026
One might have assumed this would all set up a heated match to decide who went on to play in the quarterfinals. Instead, tennis fans watched a fairly one-sided affair.
Lehecka hung around in sets, but when the more important points were played, Zverev was king. He played with poise and coolness in the first two sets, which proved that his winning Roland Garros might have changed the arc of the rest of his career. He was no longer the best player to never win a major. Now, he wanted more.
As all great champions do, Zverev was able to raise his level at the end of a set. In the opener, each held serve until 4-all, and then the German got a break and followed that with an easy hold. The second set went almost the same way, but this time Zverev would get the break at 5-all to take the set 7-5.
The two-seed was fighting off all of Lehecka's break point opportunities (the Czech was zero for seven in the first two sets and through the first six games of the third set). Zverev was two of six, the ultimate difference at the beginning of the match.
At 3-all in set three, though, the match was paused due to the 11 pm curfew for Wimbledon. The question was whether the temporary stoppage would help Lehecka turn the match around the next day, or whether Zverev would have a short day's work on Tuesday.
The answer was the former. Playing for his Wimbledon 2026 life, Lehecka came out strong with a hold, a break, and then another hold to force a fourth set. The break in play had seemingly rescued him from quick and certain defeat.
The fourth set became a battle of who could hold serve. Each did, though, and the set was decided by a tie-break; Zverev was only a few points from the semifinals, and Lehecka was just a few from forcing a fifth set.
The German took a quick advantage with a mini-break, but serving at 5-3, Zverev dropped the point, and the tie-break was back on serve. Lehecka lost the next point, however. Shockingly, trying to serve for the match, Zverev double-faulted, and the tie-break went back to 6-all. It would not prove costly, though; he would finish the tie-break 8-6 and move into the next round.
Alexander Zverev will next play one of his greatest nemeses in the Wimbledon 2026 quarterfinals. He will take on Taylor Fritz, whose game is perfectly made for grass courts and who has beaten Zverev seven straight times dating back to Wimbledon 2024.
