Glasgow Times

Nick’s on Tsong as he homesinonf­inalweek

- By TONY BATTEN

NICK Kyrgios boosted hopes of a home winner at the Australian Open by beating his childhood hero Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the third round at Melbourne Park.

The Australian has made it clear how badly he wants to be in the mix for the title with his profession­al approach so far and he proved the stronger in the big moments to win 7-6 (7/5) 4-6 7-6 (8/6) 7-6 (7/5).

Kyrgios attended the 2008 tournament, when Tsonga reached the final, as a 12-year-old fan and took a ball to each of the Frenchman’s practice sessions to get autographe­d.

Kyrgios had a bit of a letdown in the second set but proved the king of the tie-break, winning five points in a row in the final one and celebratin­g his victory with an exuberant pump of the fists.

“It was amazing,” he said. “I’d never won a match on this court. Playing Jo, I was obviously very nervous. He was a guy I looked up to as a kid, still do, he’s a champion of the game.

“I was getting prepared for a fifth set. I just stayed composed, tried to make returns and fired it through. I’ve got doubles tomorrow and then I’ve got a tough match against [Grigor] Dimitrov.”

Kyrgios felt added tension because of the presence court-side of Hollywood star Will Smith. “I was so nervous when I saw him,” said the 22-year-old. “People think I’m cool but I just wanted him to think I was the coolest person ever.”

Rafael Nadal l ooked i n ominous form in a crushing win over Damir Dzumhur to reach the last 16. Playing in much cool- er conditions than the daytime matches, Nadal took an hour and 50 minutes to overcome the Bosnian 28th seed 6-1 6-3 6-1.

Last year’s runner-up, who plays 24th seed Diego Schwartzma­n next, has yet to drop a set and has put concern about the state of his knees firmly behind him.

Nadal said: “I needed hours on court, hours of practice, hours of playing sets with different players. That’s what I did. I think I did a good preparatio­n here. I felt myself playing well. Here I am in the fourth round. That’s because I am doing the right things. Let’s see how far I can go.”

THINGS were tougher for third seed Grigor Dimitrov, the man Nadal beat in an epic semi-final 12 months ago. Dimitrov has yet to find the form that carried him to the brink of a first grand slam final but there is no doubt about his desire and he battled past 30th seed Andrey Rublev 6-3 4-6 6-4 6-4.

The Bulgarian was taken to five sets by American qualifier Mackenzie McDonald in the previous round and was at least happy that he is heading i n the right direction.

Dimitrov said: “I recovered well. Obviously today was another tough test for me. I just had to find a way again, simple as that. At least the game was a little bit better than the previous match.”

Dimitrov and Rublev served a remarkable 28 double faults between them, with the Bulgarian throwing in 15. “That’s absolutely unacceptab­le,” he said. “Hopefully I serve better next round.”

Dimitrov surely cannot afford a repeat against Kyrgios, who he lost to at the Brisbane Internatio­nal two weeks ago.

 ??  ?? Nick Kyrgios punches the air in delight after seeing off Jo-Wilfried Tsonga of France to reach the fourth round at the Australian Open
Nick Kyrgios punches the air in delight after seeing off Jo-Wilfried Tsonga of France to reach the fourth round at the Australian Open

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