San Francisco Chronicle

U.S. Open: Murray cruises through 1st-round match

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NEW YORK — Nick Kyrgios does and says what he wants on a tennis court, seemingly no matter the ramificati­ons, and amid all the near-napping, cursing and racket smashing, he troubled Andy Murray for moments at the U.S. Open.

Only for brief moments, though.

In the tournament’s mostantici­pated first-round matchup, the No. 3-seeded Murray hit 18 aces, saved 11 of 14 break points and, perhaps most important, stayed steady in the face of Kyrgios’ various distractio­ns, putting together a 7-5, 6-3, 4-6, 6-1 victory Tuesday night.

“Obviously, for me, it’s important when you’re playing against him,” Murray said, “to just concentrat­e on your side of the court.”

This was Kyrgios’ first match since he was essentiall­y put on probation by the ATP, with the threat of a 28-day suspension and $25,000 fine if he misbehaves at one of the tour’s sanctioned events over the next six months. Those parameters don’t apply at the U.S. Open, however, because Grand Slam tournament­s are sanctioned by the Internatio­nal Tennis Federation.

The discipline stemmed from some trash-talking last month against Stan Wawrinka in Montreal, where a courtside microphone picked up Kyrgios saying that his pal, Australian pro Thanasi Kokkinakis, had been with Wawrinka’s girlfriend. Kyrgios was fined a total of $12,500 the next day by the ATP, which later said it would monitor his behavior.

“I thought I’ve been dealing with that pretty well. Obviously it’s been tough. But I think I’ve moved on from it,” the 20-yearold Kyrgios said at Tuesday’s post-match news conference, referring to the whole Montreal episode and its aftermath. “I’d like to think that I’m going to learn from it. I think I have. I think I’m on the right path. I don’t think any of us in this room right now were perfect at 20. Speak up if you were.”

When that was greeted by silence from reporters, Kyrgios nodded and said: “Thought so.”

Later, asked what he meant by saying he had learned something along the way, Kyrgios replied: “Keep your mouth shut at times.”

During the match, Kyrgios leaned all the way back in his changeover chair during breaks, closing his eyes and resting against his towel or clutching it like a kid’s blanket, looking as if he was about to doze off for a nap. He spiked his racket against the court and later whacked it against a wall behind the baseline. He was given a warning by chair umpire Carlos Ramos for swearing too loudly. He complained to Ramos that spectators were being allowed to wander to their seats during a game. He won a point with the help of a shot between his legs. He whiffed on a leaping overhead attempt.

Boris Becker, a six-time major champion as a player and now No. 1 Novak Djokovic’s coach, said in an on-air interview during ESPN’s broadcast that Kyrgios could stand to talk a little less and “should be famous for his on-court performanc­e and not his antics.”

Asked Tuesday about the tour’s handling of the matter, Wawrinka, a two-time major champion who could face Murray in the U.S. Open quarterfin­als, said: “I don’t care much about that anymore.”

Earlier Tuesday, Kokkinakis retired because of cramps while playing 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, one of a record 12 mid-match retirement­s in the first round at Flushing Meadows, where the temperatur­e has topped 90 degrees and the humidity has been heavy.

Ten men and two women have dropped out so far, including five Tuesday: Kokkinakis, Marcos Baghdatis, Ernests Gulbis, Aleksandr Nedovyesov and Marina Erakovic.

In other first-round play, second-seeded Roger Federer routed Leonardo Mayer of Argentina 6-1, 6-2, 6-2 in a brisk 77 minutes, and the fifth-seeded Wawrinka beat Albert RamosVinol­as 7-5, 6-4, 7-6. American Donald Young was a five-set winner over 11th seed Gilles Simon. Other men’s seeds who advanced included No. 6 Tomas Berdych, No. 13 John Isner and No. 28 Jack Sock.

Women’s seeded winners included No. 2 Simona Halep, No. 4 Caroline Wozniacki, No. 9 Garbine Muguruza, No. 11 Angelique Kerber, No. 16 Sara Errani and No. 20 Victoria Azarenka.

No. 6 Lucie Safarova, No. 14 Timea Bacsinszky and No. 28 Irina-Camelia Begu were seeded losers.

 ?? Julio Cortez / Associated Press ?? Nick Kyrgios of Australia leans all the way back in his changeover chair during a break in his four-set loss to third-seeded Andy Murray at the U.S. Open.
Julio Cortez / Associated Press Nick Kyrgios of Australia leans all the way back in his changeover chair during a break in his four-set loss to third-seeded Andy Murray at the U.S. Open.
 ?? Clive Brunskill / Getty Images ?? Andy Murray served 18 aces and saved 11 of 14 break points in his first-round win.
Clive Brunskill / Getty Images Andy Murray served 18 aces and saved 11 of 14 break points in his first-round win.

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