Britain's Andy Murray came through his first match since a career-saving hip operation with an impressive victory in the Queen's doubles.
Murray, 32, was seemingly set for retirement before having his hip resurfaced in January.
Five months later the Scot was back on court alongside Spain's Feliciano Lopez at the Fever-Tree Championships.
The pair won 7-6 (7-5) 6-3 against Colombian top seeds Robert Farah and Juan Sebastian Cabal.
"It was brilliant. I enjoyed it a lot," Murray told BBC Sport. "I was a bit slow at the beginning and got better as the match went on.
"I'm fortunate to be back playing again.
"Leading up to the match I was quite relaxed but I was a bit nervous when we started walking to the court.
"You want the nerves and the butterflies in the stomach and I had that."
Analysis
BBC tennis correspondent Russell Fuller
Punching the air at regular intervals and seemingly loving every minute after five months on the sidelines, Murray returned as a winner.
He was at his sharpest in the second set - executing a high backhand volley with a high degree of difficulty, and then hitting two thumping forehand returns to get the decisive break of serve.
Murray also took a tumble, to no ill-effect, and there was no sign of the on-court limp we had become so accustomed to before his surgeon worked her magic.
More soon.