The changing of the guard was an unsettling sound for Novak Djokovic.
The Serb didn't see Grigor Dimitrov's Centre Court dismissal of defending champion Andy Murray—he was preoccupied playing Marin Cilic on adjacent No. 1 Court—but he heard the upset unfolding loud and clear.
"It was distracting, to be honest," Djokovic said of roars from the crowd trying to rouse Murray spilling over into his match.
Tuning out the background noise, the 2011 Wimbledon champion broke Cilic seven times to rally into his sixth semifinal at SW19. Djokovic used a favorite pattern to press the mute button: Curling his backhand cross-court to corner the Croatian and open the court, Djokovic drilled his backhand down the line to finish points.
Changing shoes after a few tumbles to the turf, the top seed's footwork and serve were sharper. He stretched the 6'6" Croatian into the corners and faced only one break point over the final two sets. Stepping into his 16th semifinal in his last 17 Grand Slam starts, Djokovic celebrated by handing his used sneakers to a fan.
New kicks will be necessary for two explosive movers in the semifinals. Djokovic has been a step better and shot cleaner than his opponent, Grigor Dimitrov, winning three of his four meetings in straight sets. In his lone win, Dimitrov denied 10 of 12 break points in a dramatic 2013 Madrid victory. Still, Djokovic couldn't resist spinning one more return when asked about facing his friend and sometime practice partner for a spot in the final.
"He hasn't lost a match on grass court this year; he's the player to beat," the six-time Grand Slam champion said of the first-time Grand Slam semifinalist.