Novak Djokovic's 399th Grand Slam match win over Italian qualifier Francesco Maestrelli propelled him into the Australian Open third round.
Fourth seed Djokovic, who is seeking a record-extending 11th Melbourne Park title and 25th Grand Slam trophy overall, systematically dismantled Maestrelli 6-3 6-2 6-2 to continue his quest to make more history on Rod Laver Arena.
The 38-year-old maintained his steady grip on the second-round clash without needing to shift into top gear and has now dropped only 14 games in two matches.
"I didn't know much about him (Maestrelli) until a few days ago, it happens more often than not these days," Djokovic said about his 23-year-old opponent.
"But the respect is always there and I didn't underestimate him. He's got a big serve and a big game, only lacking a bit of experience. He's got the game to go far and high in the world rankings and I wish him that."
He has never lost a match at a major to a player ranked as low as world No 141 Maestrelli, who was making his Grand Slam debut, and Djokovic was in control from the start of the contest.
Djokovic raced through the opening set on the back of a break in the second game and pounced again in the opening game of the next set to heap pressure on Maestrelli, who struggled to capitalise on his few openings.
The Serb brought up set point with an acrobatic backhand and secured the set with an unreturned shot from the same flank to close in on his 101st victory in Melbourne, leaving him one shy of record-holder Roger Federer.
Maestrelli had a rare moment of joy in the third set as he recovered a break after conceding two, but Djokovic raised his level again to close out the victory.
Two-time defending champion Jannik Sinner outclassed home wildcard James Duckworth 6-1 6-4 6-2 to stroll through.
The Italian world No 2 was in no mood for an extended shift on Rod Laver Arena as he set up a clash with American Eliot Spizzirri.
It was Sinner's 27th successive Tour-level victory against Australian players, his last defeat against one coming against Duckworth in Toronto in 2021.
Lorenzo Musetti, the fifth seed, dominated his Italian counterpart Lorenzo Sonego, winning the contest 6-3 6-3 6-4 to advance to the third round.
Musetti outperformed his namesake in long rallies while the 30-year-old Sonego appeared to be struggling physically towards the end against his younger opponent.
Stan Wawrinka lived to fight another day in his final Australian Open on Thursday, the three-times Grand Slam winner battling to a marathon 4-6 6-3 3-6 7-5 7-6 (10-3) victory over Frenchman Arthur Gea.
The Swiss, who won his first Grand Slam in Melbourne in 2014 before going on to capture the French Open in 2015 and the US Open a year later, had announced before the tournament that he would retire at the end of the 2026 season.
It was the 49th time Wawrinka has contested a five-set match at a Grand Slam, more than any other player, and, asked how he felt at the end, he replied: "Exhausted."
It was 21-year-old Gea, playing the first five-set match of his career, that faltered physically, though, the Frenchman struggling with his knee throughout the deciding tie-break.
"It's my last Australian Open, I'm trying to last as long as possible," added Wawrinka as he addressed the crowd.
"I'm not young any more so I need your energy. It's an amazing feeling to be on this court - so much noise, so much support."
Wawrinka's reward for beating Gea is a clash with ninth seed Taylor Fritz on Friday.
On how he would try to recover, Wawrinka pointed at a fan in the stand, saying: "No idea, but I think at the beginning you dropped a beer so maybe I'm going to pick up a beer. I deserve one."
Fritz, a former US Open finalist, continued his the strong start to his campaign, beating Bit Kopriva 6-1 6-4 7-6 (7-4).
Valentin Vacherot, the 30th seed, is continuing to show that his remarkable breakthrough in Shanghai last autumn was no fluke as he defeated Australian wild card Rinky Hijikata 6-1 6-3 4-6 6-2.
The 27-year-old, the first player from Monaco to reach the third round at a Grand Slam in the open era, stunningly won the Masters 1000 title in China as a qualifier, beating his cousin Arthur Rinderknech in the final.
That elevated a player who had competed almost exclusively at the lower levels of the sport to the global stage.
His first-round win over Martin Damm was only the second best-of-five-set match he had played, and he followed that up with victory over Hijikata.
He said of his moment of history: "I'm trying to be the first for everything these days, but no, it's great. I have a lot of pride behind me, the country. I know a lot of people follow me back home. A lot of people stayed awake, so I'm really glad about that. Happy to have won for them.
"I'm sure so many people thought it was just the one week. Then even though I did well after (at the Masters event) in Paris as well, it was probably just about my confidence of the moment, so I'm just happy to win as many matches as I can.
"If some people were wondering if I had the level, maybe they have more answers. I just play tennis and try to play as good this season and every tournament."
He will take on eighth seed Ben Shelton next after the American defeated Australian qualifier Dane Sweeny 6-3 6-2 6-2.
"I'm excited. I'm really happy to play him, because he played two years college, and we had his first year in common, so he was really young," Vacherot said.
"He was 17 or 18, but already pretty impressive with his serve... it allows me to play some top-10 guys and see how I can do."
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