Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Temper gets in the way

No. 18 seed falls apart, smashes racket in setback

- By Howard Fendrich

PARIS — Nick Kyrgios’ talent is undeniable. So is his temperamen­t.

Docked a point for smashing rackets, the 18th-seeded Kyrgios went from a set and a breakup in the French Open’s second round to a swift loss, ceding 16 of the last 19 games while being beaten, 5-7, 6-4, 6-1, 6-2, Thursday by Kevin Anderson.

As men’s tennis searches for the face of its next generation, perhaps someone who one day will fill a void left by folks such as Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray, there are those who believe Kyrgios, 22, has the flashy game and attention-attracting personalit­y to fit the bill.

Still, it takes on-court success to lead a sport, and Kyrgios’ uneven attitude during matches can derail him at a moment’s notice. That happened Thursday, and it was noticed by Anderson — a 31year-old South African ranked 56th and only once a quarterfin­alist in 31 appearance­s at Grand Slam tournament­s.

“While he was sort of getting into his own head and struggling with some [of] his own battles,” Anderson said, “I didn’t give him a way to get backin the match.”

Other seeded players lost on day five of the clay-court major, when No. 1 Andy Murray and No. 3 Stan Wawrinka moved into the third round.

Those exiting included No. 12 Madison Keys — bothered by her surgically repaired left wrist, the American was eliminated by 290th-ranked qualifier Petra Martic of Croatia, 36, 6-3, 6-1 — No. 20 Barbora Strycova and No. 29 Ana Konjuh among the women, and 2010 Wimbledon runner-up Tomas Berdych and 2013 French Open runner-up David Ferrer among the men.

None, though, departed quite as destructiv­ely as Kyrgios, who has proven capable of beating stars such as Federer and Nadal, but also been prone to fits of pique, not to mention losses before the fourth round at six of the past seven Grand Slam tournament­s. After taking the opening set and leading 4-2 in the second Thursday, Kyrgios fell apart.

Down 5-4 and serving, he smacked a 136 mph ace to get within a point of 5-all. But then a poor drop shot hit his side of the net tape. Next came a double-fault that gave Anderson a set point and prompted Kyrgios to spike his racket, which got mangled and bounced so far it landed at the feet of a line judge behind the baseline.

That drew a warning from the chair umpire for racket abuse. But Kyrgios wasn’t done. After gifting Anderson the set with a second consecutiv­e double-fault, Kyrgios trudged to the sideline, head bowed, sat down and proceeded to whack his racket six times against a metal box. The loud reverberat­ions caused Anderson to turn to his right and check out what was going on — and drew a point penalty, assessed at the beginning ofthe third set.

“I don’t know if that’s the best role model you want,” Kyrgios acknowledg­ed, after being told by a reporter that a boy sitting in the front row at Court 3 was following this display from close-up. “But ... I’ve been doing it my whole career, really. I think it’s just a habit now.”

 ??  ?? Nick Kyrgios of Australia covers his face after missing a shot in his loss against South Africa’s Kevin Anderson Thursday at the French Open in Paris.
Nick Kyrgios of Australia covers his face after missing a shot in his loss against South Africa’s Kevin Anderson Thursday at the French Open in Paris.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States