Andy Murray's Wimbledon dream is over after a straight-sets defeat to Rafael Nadal.
The British number one, who staged a thrilling comeback to beat Richard Gasquet and reach the quarter-finals, went down 6-3 6-2 6-4 on Centre Court.
Nadal remains on course for a potential repeat of last year's magnificent final against five-time champion Roger Federer, with a first Wimbledon crown firmly in his sights after a crushing victory over the world number one in last month's French Open final.
The Spaniard was simply too good for Murray as he continued the impressive form he has shown throughout the tournament.
Murray never threatened to break - winning only nine points on his opponent's serve - while he was constantly struggling to hold his own delivery.
Late start
On a rain-hit day, the match did not get under way until 6.17pm, with every chance the match might spill over into a second day.
The Scot could ill afford the sort of start he made against Gasquet on Monday, with Nadal extremely unlikely to choke in the manner of the mercurial Frenchman.
The chief concern was the Murray serve and if he was in any doubt how consistent it would need to be, Nadal let him know by ripping a return winner off his first second serve of the match in game two.
Murray failed to heed the warning and needed some big serving to save two break points in game six.
He looked to have done the same in his next service game but a glaring smash error gifted Nadal the break and the second seed served out the set with ease.
Murray was looking for his first win over four-time French Open champion Nadal, whose three head-to-head successes included a five-set thriller at last year's Australian Open.
The Scot was taken to deuce in his opening service game of the second set but held thanks in part to his first successful drop shot, a tactic his opponent had already used three times to good effect.
Costly double
The mix of Nadal winners and Murray errors was not encouraging and the Spaniard broke to love in game three when the 12th seed double-faulted.
Nadal's vicious forehand was giving Murray all sorts of problems and the Scot had to call upon three big first serves to avoid the double break in game five.
Murray was looking jaded and the crowd were equally subdued, Nadal's exhibition of power hitting and wonderful winners seeing him break to love in game seven.
There was a chink of light when Nadal let a 40-0 lead slip with a double-fault when serving for the set, but it was the tiniest of blips as the Spaniard took a two-set lead.
Murray was now relying on staging the kind of amazing comeback he produced against Gasquet but Nadal had previously lost only once from this position - to Roger Federer.
Murray was no nearer to solving the riddle of the Nadal serve, against which he had won only a handful of points.
The Spaniard was reading Murray's like a book but the Scot was staying in touch after thanks to a couple of timely approaches to net.
An uncharacteristic error from Nadal opened the door in game four but he shut it just as quickly.
And he had another two break points in the next game, but for once his trusty forehand let him down as the crowd began to get behind Murray.
But the Scot did himself no favours, dropping his serve from a winning position with some sloppy play in game seven.
Now he had to break Nadal to stay alive but he was no nearer in game eight and needed to win the point of the match with a superb pick-up the following game to make the Spaniard serve it out.
But unlike Gasquet on Monday, there was no collapse as Nadal moved ominously towards a third straight Wimbledon final.








