The Cairns Post

Confident Kokkinakis has Nadal in US Open sights

- DARREN WALTON

THANASI Kokkinakis believes he can do what John Millman couldn’t and send Rafael Nadal packing from the US Open after posting his first main-draw win at a grand slam in more than four years.

Vindicatin­g his wildcard entry, Kokkinakis slugged it out for almost four hours before finally putting away Belarusian qualifier Ilya Ivashka 6-3, 7-6 (10-8), 6-7 (7-4), 6-2 on Tuesday night.

The emotional triumph, after a diabolical run with injuries, was Kokkinakis’s first success at a major since an epic five-set comeback win over Bernard Tomic at the 2015 French Open.

“It was a hell of a feeling,” Kokkinakis said.

“Obviously I feel like I’ve had a lot of my tennis career so far, to this point, taken away.

“I knew the first two sets, getting those under my belt was going to be big. Luckily I got the second set after I broke a string on set point. “What are the odds? I’ve probably been playing for two hours and then on that point it breaks but, you know, that’s tennis. It’s definitely a massive relief.” It was also the world No.203’s first victory at Flushing Meadows, having lost a sapping five-setter to Janko Tipsarevic two years ago and being forced to retire with cramps in the deciding set against Richard Gasquet in 2015. His reward is a big one: a show-court blockbuste­r with three-times champion Nadal on Thursday after the Spaniard crushed Millman 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 in his opener. “I give myself a chance for sure. It’s going to be tough – very physical but I’m ready for it,” Kokkinakis said.

“I know what he brings. I’ve seen him play enough, I hope. I’m going to play my game and see what happens.

“I’ve played a lot of lefties in my last tournament.”

Like Millman beat Federer in New York last year, Kokkinakis said he would draw on his career-defining win over the great Swiss in Miami in 2018 as inspiratio­n for another upset against one of the sport’s living legends.

“I know I have the capabiliti­es to beat these good players,” he said. “I’m just going to go out there and treat it like any other match and play aggressive and play my game.

“I definitely think I can do some things. That’s kind of what’s kept me ticking. “If I thought I had like a ceiling of maybe around 100 or 60 to 70 (in the world), if that’s where I was going to play, then maybe I would have hung up my racquets for sure.”

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