Murray, Mayer reach Wimbledon quarters
Murray, Mayer reach Wimbledon quarters
Murray reached the last eight for the fifth straight year by beating the 16th-seeded Marin Cilic.

London: On a start-and-stop day at Wimbledon, Andy Murray and Florian Mayer found enough time in between rain showers on Tuesday to wrap up their suspended matches and reach the quarter-finals.

Murray reached the last eight for the fifth straight year by beating the 16th-seeded Marin Cilic 7-5, 6-2, 6-3 while Mayer ousted Richard Gasquet of France 6-3, 6-1, 3-6, 6-2. American qualifier Brian Baker's remarkable run ended, though, with a 6-1, 7-6 (4), 6-3 loss to 27th-seeded Philipp Kohlschreiber of Germany.

Rain had prevented five of the men's fourth-round matches from being completed on Monday, and the weather continued to cause headaches as the start of play on outside courts was delayed by about 30 minutes because of light showers. When matches started, they were quickly halted again for another rain delay of about an hour.

"We stopped obviously a lot," Murray said. "You're always a little bit edgy when you come out after a rain delay when you have the momentum with you. You stop, and then you come back out, and it feels a bit like you start from scratch again. I needed to serve well today and I got a lot of free points that helped me out."

Murray's match was halted Monday with the Briton leading 40-0 at 3-1 in the second set on Monday. He had time to play one point on Court 1 — clinching that game — before rain started falling again. One game later, the match was suspended again. After the second resumption, there was another slight break early in the third set as the players remained in their chairs for about five minutes under umbrellas as officials waited for a light shower to subside.

The Briton's victory never looked in doubt though, and he served out the match to love when the Croat netted a backhand.

The 126th-ranked Baker was trying to become the third American qualifier to reach the quarter-finals at the All England Club. He was playing in Wimbledon's main draw for the first time after being off the tour for more than five years because of a series of operations, including to his right elbow.

He was ranked 458th at the start of 2012 but now will rise inside the top 100.

On Monday, top-ranked Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Mikhail Youzhny were the only men to complete their round of 16 matches.

The women's quarter-finals were being played later on Tuesday.

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