Former Reeds School student Chris Eaton has vowed he will be back after a successful run at Wimbledon last week left him with a thirst for more.

The 20-year-old big serving Surrey man crashed 7-6 6-2 6-4 to 25-year-old Russian 25th seed Dmitry Tursunov on Court One on Thursday having pulled off the shock of the first round two days earlier.

The Sutton Tennis Academy garduate, who won through qualifying at Roehampton, beat Serbian Boris Pashanski - 547 places above him in the world rankings - to set up his dream date on a major show court at SW19.

And 661 ranked Eaton, cheered on by an army of female admirers, reckons a taste of the big time can see him return again and avoid being labelled a one-year wonder.

"This is the biggest tournament in the tennis calendar. I'm going to do everything in my power to be back next year," he said.

"But at the end of the day it is not just about Wimbledon. I can go and win three or four Challenger titles now, not do well at Wimbledon next year and it would be horrendous.

"I'd obviously love to do well here again. It is the best tournament, but it is not the only tournament."

The run sees Eaton pocket £17,000 for reaching the second round and the rankings points will see him eligible for tournaments on the Challenger tour having done time on the Futures circuit at far flung places like Uzbekistan.

And Eaton, whose former coach Justion Sherring is director of tennis at the Weybridge Tennis Academy, admits his run has broaden his horizons.

"I tend to raise my game when I play better players. It will improve my tennis more if I get out there with the greater players, test myself and see if I can mix it with them," he added.

"It is a dream to play at Wimbledon. All it can do is raise my dreams, raise my standards and raise my expectations of myself.

"From now on there are new goals and new standards have just been set."

Eaton joined fellow Brit Andy Murray in the second round and having taken Tursunov to a tie-break had raised hopes of an unlikely spot in the third.

And he paid tribute to his fans on Court One, who cheered every point despite him falling to a straight sets defeat.

"They've been absolutely phenomenal. They have made my matches here," he said.

"The support was amazing. They were with me every step of the way."