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Aussie tennis Twitter tussle

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NICK Kyrgios and Fernando Verdasco have been involved in a Twitter spat after the veteran Spaniard’s victory over Thanasi Kokkinakis at the Miami Open. Verdasco overcame Kokkinakis 3-6, 6-4, 7-6 (7-4) in a tense third-round tussle which included a heated exchange between the pair about the conduct of the Australian qualifier’s father during the match.

During the almost threehour showdown Kyrgios tweeted: “I hope TK wins this match, Verdasco is the saltiest dude, must be frustrated at his past success against Aussies.”

The tweet was deleted after Kokkinakis, who won a deciding tie-breaker to knock Swiss world No.1 and defending champion Roger Federer out of the Masters 1000 event in the second round, was unable to get over the line against Verdasco.

When the 34-year-old then responded to Kyrgios on Twitter — “@NickKyrgio­s when you have the courage to put a tweet insulting another player you need to have the same to don’t delete it” — Kyrgios responded in kind.

“I honestly would have told it to Fernando’s face, the rea- son I deleted my previous tweet was because I didn’t want to cause unwanted attention, but I’m just gonna leave this here. Thanks for blocking me, I’m sure that took a lot of courage x,” he tweeted.

Midway through the third set of the round of 32 clash, Kokkinakis took exception to the 31st seed disrupting him during his service motion and complained to the chair umpire at the change of ends.

Verdasco countered that a person behind him in the crowd, who he thought was Kokkinakis’s coach, was constantly disrupting him during his first and second serve.

After a lengthy row, Verdasco said to Kokkinakis: “I’m not trying to disrespect you, I’m not talking about you, I’m talking about the guy in the crowd.” When Kokkinakis identified that it was his father who Verdasco was referring to, he replied: “That is affecting me. That’s my f---ing dad.”

Verdasco rallied from a 3-1 deficit in the third set and again from 3-0 down in the tiebreaker.

After the match, the pair engaged in a frosty handshake.

It was a much smoother on court for Kyrgios, the 17th seed, who cruised to a routine 6-3 6-3 over 15th-seeded Italian Fabio Fognini, requiring just 66 minutes to progress.

“We both competed,” Kyrgios told the ATP website.

“I just played a little better in some bigger points.” Kyrgios was dominant on serve yet again and has not faced a break point in his two matches at Crandon Park.

“I knew it was going to be tough. He has a lot of tricks up his sleeve and he’s very unpredicta­ble,” Kyrgios said.

“I knew I just had to serve well, play aggressive and keep the points short.”

Kyrgios will meet fourth seed Alexander Zverev in the round of 16 after the German beat veteran David Ferrer 2-6, 6-2, 6-4.

 ??  ?? Thanasi Kokkinakis complains.
Thanasi Kokkinakis complains.

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