Yuki, ranked 202, overwhelmed Karunuday Singh 6-0 6-3 in one hour and 18 minutes while Vishnu dumped second seed Jeevan Nedunchezhian 6-3 6-2 in one hour and 19 minutes.
Jeevan was very erratic today and his game was full of unforced errors which made the job easy for Vishnu, who was again solid. Left-handed Jeevan relies a lot on his forehand but he could not us his most important weapon effectively today.
Yuki will take on fifth seed German Torsten Wietoska, who ended the run of Sidharth Rawat 6-2 6-3.
Yuki had lost all three matches to Karunuday before and they squared off today against each other after two years.
Yuki showed that he has graduated to next level as he controlled the game amazingly. His serve, range of shots, intensity with which he played made him a delight to watch.
Karunuday, who is a much better player than what he showed today, failed to play his game as he tried to hit his shots too hard and missed out on execution.
There was a bit of fight in the second set but Yuki was good enough to negotiate anything thrown at him.
Karunuday, coached by Paul Dale, was gracious in accepting that Yuki was playing much better tennis but also promised a better fight the next time he plays Yuki.
"Yuki played solid and I didn't that's it," was his curt reply when asked to describe the match.
