Saturday Star

Kyrgios the ATP’S underarm court jester

- MIKE DICKSON Daily Mail

NICK Kyrgios is sitting in the bowels of the Miami Dolphins stadium and beaming after the reaction to his latest victory – from the courtside security personnel.

“Afterwards I had about five of the guards who don’t care much for the game tell me how much fun that was to watch,” he says. “That’s super important because this is the entertainm­ent business.”

I was speaking to the 23-yearold Australian just after he had gone through to the third round of the Miami Open with a win over qualifier Alexander Bublik that had an element of the Harlem Globetrott­ers about it. The bumper attendance on the secondary arena at Hard Rock Stadium was bigger than that watching Serena Williams concurrent­ly make her debut on the giant main court.

There was his usual mix of scorching winners, gossamer-touch drop shots, careless mistakes, drives from between the legs and that strange reluctance to chase down every single ball. He has a curious ability to excite a crowd while displaying a certain indifferen­ce.

This is perhaps why he can to lose to anyone – sometimes in dismal fashion – while enjoying an outstandin­g aggregate 6-6 record against the sainted trio of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic. He is 2-0 against the latter.

Kyrgios talks like he plays tennis: fast, unpredicta­ble and not afraid to display a wide repertoire of shots. This is particular­ly the case when assessing how he has managed to compile his enviable stats against the big three.

“I just go out there and do my thing and nothing changes whether I’m playing Alexander Bublik or Federer or Rafa,” he says. “I serve big, I back myself, at the end of the day they are only human.

“They don’t do anything spectacula­rly well. Obviously Federer is unbelievab­ly talented and the greatest of all time, but he gets tired in tight situations. Djokovic struggles with short balls; he doesn’t like to come forward. Second serve can get a bit shaky.

“Rafa loves to be defensive so you can really push through his forehand and expose how far back he stands. So they do have weaknesses and if you play the right way and execute it right under pressure then they can be beaten. You just have to play the right way and for the stars to align. Yes, they are a level above all of us, but they are beatable, I don’t think like they are gods to the sport.”

Late last month Kyrgios went out and beat Nadal amid a febrile atmosphere at the ATP Tour event in Acapulco. On the way he served underarm, infuriatin­g the great Spaniard, who afterwards declared that his opponent lacked respect for both his opponents and himself.

Unlike too many of the present day younger ATP players, you will not find Kyrgios coming off court to describe it as an ‘honour’ to share the court with them.

“I don’t know how much respect the others show them but I’m not going to really respect someone just because they can hit a ball over the net; that’s not enough for me to give them respect,” said Kyrgios.

“Why would I give them an inch? They’ve already got the advantage with always playing on the best courts in the best conditions, all that sort of stuff, so I don’t know why you would give them inches. Obviously what they (the trio) do for the sport is huge, they inspire millions. But when I’m on the court we are competing and I’m not trying to be your friend.”

It is perhaps telling that Kyrgios’s peak this year came when winning the ATP title in the Mexican playground, where there were evidently plenty of distractio­ns away from the grind of the tennis.

“Acapulco was insane on and off the court, I definitely lost a couple of years off my life that week. I was going jet-skiing every day, I had a my best friend there, it was like a holiday week, that’s when I tend to play well. One of the best atmosphere­s ever.

“I hit it (the underarm serve) and people say, ‘he’s being disrespect­ful’, but when other people do it they’d be saying, ‘very technicall­y switched on’. When I did it, it’s like the roof is falling in. I’m never going to hit one again because I got scorched for it … I’m kidding – I’m hitting it again for sure.

“At times I think tennis is way too serious. I don’t think about goalsettin­g. There’s so much going on in the world that we are so sheltered from, I’m not trying to put my attention into tennis too much, I come in and play my match at somewhere like this and I’m out of here.”

In his darker moments Kyrgios does not always help himself, putting in half-hearted efforts or descending to puerile antics like making suggestive gestures with water bottles, as he did last summer at Queen’s. But the ongoing discussion among some earnest types about whether he is ‘good for the game’ is tennis’s most inane debate – of course he is, for all the undulating behaviour.

The Harlem Globetrott­ers analogy is a fitting one, because he makes no secret that what he would much rather be doing is shooting hoops.

“When I was 14, my parents told me I could no longer play basketball and still to this day it breaks my heart. It was one of the toughest challenges to give that up. I love basketball.” |

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