Three Kiwi players in Wimbledon quarterfinals

Raven Klaasen of South Africa and Michael Venus of New Zealand returns against Alex Bolt of Australia and Lleyton Hewitt of Australia. Photo: Getty Images
Raven Klaasen of South Africa and Michael Venus of New Zealand play at Wimbledon. Photo: Getty Images

It was a long day, but also a successful one for the New Zealand players in the gentlemen's doubles at Wimbledon as Michael Venus, Artem Sitak and Queenstown player Ben McLachlan all advanced into the quarterfinals. 

Venus, Sitak and McLachlan have all advanced to the quarterfinals with their partners, while Venus will get to play on the hallowed centre court.

On Monday, McLachlan, who due to heritage on his mother's side is representing Japan, won in straight sets with his partner Jan-Lennard Struff against the German pair of Philipp Petzschner and Tim Putz 6-3, 6-4, 7-6.

Artem Sitak and Divij Sharan made it back to back victories from being down two sets to love, with a 1-6 6-7 6-4 6-4 6-4 win over Jonathan Erlich from Israel and Poland's Marcin Matkowski.

Then Michael Venus and Raven Klaasen bounced back from losing the third and fourth sets to record a 6-3 7-6 6-7 6-7 6-3 victory of Joao Sousa from Portugal and Argentina's Leonardo Mayer.

Artem Sitak of New Zealand plays a forehand during his qualifying match against Donald Young of...
Artem Sitak of New Zealand. Photo: Getty Images

The first set was wrapped up in 28 minutes by Venus and Klaasen. They went up 3-0 and played consistent tennis from there to close it out.

In the second set there was nothing to split the two teams until Sousa made a mistake at 5-6 in the tiebreak and Klaasen did likewise in the third set in the tiebreak.

In the fourth set tiebreak Venus and Klaasen fell behind early and weren't able to recover, losing it 7-3.

So we were into the fifth set and the drama happened when Sousa was broken in the sixth game.

Venus served in the next game and fell behind 0-40, allowing the Portuguese/Argentinian team to get tantalisingly close to being back in the match.

But Venus won every remaining point in the set and a few minutes later the match was over.

Sitak and Sharan's fifth set match was of a different kind, they lost the first two sets and for the second match in a row came back from that treacherous position to win.

Queenstown tennis playing brothers Ben McLachlan (above) and Riki both moved easily into the...
Queenstown tennis player Ben McLachlan. Photo: Supplied

"We had chances in the beginning of the set, but then they got that break and were confident and really fresh still, because it's the beginning of the match," Sitak said.

"In the second set we got into a rhythm and figured out what we needed to do and at 6-5 we had them at 15-40 on Matkowski's serve, so there were two set points right there and unfortunately he hit two big serves to bet get out of it and in the tiebreak they made a few more returns than us.

"After the second set, we said let's keep fighting, keep pushing and looking for those opportunities. If we win the third set and it goes the distance again the other guys might get tired.

"In the middle of the fourth set I was feeling tired myself and I kept telling myself that if I'm feeling like that, the other guys must be exhausted, so let's keep pushing and we'll get an opportunity.

"That's exactly what happened and we got one break in each set."

In the quarterfinals Sitak and Sharan will play against Jack Sock and Mike Bryan on show court No 3, while Venus and Klaasen are up against local hope Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares from Brazil in a match that will be played on centre court.

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