Australia's Dylan Alcott has claimed his second Wimbledon quad wheelchair singles championship with a straight-sets defeat of Dutchman Sam Schroder.
Alcott triumphed 6-2, 6-2 to add the Wimbledon crown to the Australian and French Open titles he had already won this year.
He only needs to win Paralympic gold in Tokyo and the US Open later this year to complete the "golden slam".
The Wimbledon victory was Alcott's 14th major singles championship.
The current world number one also won the singles title in 2019.
"I'm cooked! That was hard," he told a good sized crowd on Court number 3.
"If that went three sets, I'm in big trouble. But I just love Wimbledon, I get emotional thinking about it here. To me, it's been a privilege .... a dual Wimbledon champion!
The 21-year-old Schroder is the only player to have beaten Alcott this season and he was confident of repeating his recent triumph over the Australian at last month's French Riviera Open.
Yet Alcott was at his sharpest on Saturday, breaking the left-hander Schroder three times in the opening set and three in the second for a comprehensive triumph.
Demonstrating more flair and touch than Schroder, especially with his drop shots, Alcott again showed why he has become a firm favourite with the Wimbledon crowd with his shows of emotion and virtuoso shot-making.
After he had wrapped up his victory in 67 minutes, Alcott — ever the showman — spun around in his wheelchair on Wimbledon's number three court to the delight of a crowd that featured a small but noisy Australian contingent.
And Alcott might have a fellow famous Aussie to share the celebrations with.
After completing her three-set win over Karolína Plíšková in the final of the women's singles, Ash Barty was asked how she planned to celebrate.
The pair often train at the same venue with Alcott saying: "She's a bloody legend. From when she was a nobody to now, the best player in the world, she's exactly the same.
"We had a coffee upstairs the other day and you just wouldn't know she was the world number one about to win Wimbledon, she's just so chilled."
ABC/AAP