San Francisco Chronicle

Plenty of dramatics as Nadal tops Kyrgios

- By Howard Fendrich Howard Fendrich is an Associated Press writer.

WIMBLEDON, England — Rafael Nadal was near the Centre Court net when Nick Kyrgios smacked a booming forehand directly at the man’s midsection — right at him, on purpose — and earned a lengthy staredown in return.

Kyrgios didn’t apologize, at the time or at his news conference — for that or for berating the chair umpire or for spending time at a local pub the night before the match.

Rarely does Kyrgios offer regrets, for much of anything. Instead, he tends to double down. He is nothing if not fascinatin­g. He is skilled, too. And yet it was Nadal who emerged from all of the tumult Thursday at Wimbledon to beat Kyrgios 63, 36, 76 (5), 76 (3) in a secondroun­d match boasting plenty of dramatics, a dose of animosity and delightful play by both men.

“I’m always willing to go out there and try to put on a show. I know people that bought a ticket today probably had a great day,” said Kyrgios, a 24yearold Australian who is ranked 43rd. “At times today, I was looking around: This is Wimbledon, playing Rafa. … But I’ll probably wake up tomorrow (and) there will be something negative about it, for sure.”

Kyrgios is capable of being as entertaini­ng and befuddling a player as there is and showed why throughout this 3hourplus match that overshadow­ed everything else happening around the grasscourt Grand Slam tournament on Day 4.

Defending champion Angelique Kerber was upset by Lauren Davis, an American who lost in qualifying but got into the main draw when someone withdrew. Seventime champion Serena Williams needed a comeback to win in three sets against an 18yearold qualifier.

Williams’ partner for mixed doubles, twotime Wimbledon singles winner Andy Murray, won his firstround match in men’s doubles as he returned to the tournament for the first time in two years following two hip operations. Marcos Baghdatis, the 2006 Australian Open runnerup and a fan favorite, played what he says will be the last match of his career. Marin Cilic, the 2014 U.S. Open champion and a 2017 Wimbledon finalist, lost, too.

Everything was rendered secondary to Nadal against Kyrgios.

Part of that is because a 19yearold Kyrgios beat thenNo. 1 Nadal at the All England Club in 2014.

Part of that is because they traded barbs away from the court recently in a spat that also involved Nadal’s uncle, Toni.

In the leadup to this meeting, Kyrgios joked that he didn’t think “me and Rafa could go down to the Dog & Fox and have a beer together,” referring to a nearby bar where Kyrgios was spotted Wednesday night. Nadal, 33, observed that he was “too old for all this stuff.”

They hardly could be more different, something Kyrgios underlined after he lost despite producing a 5844 advantage in winners, including 29 aces — one a second serve at a tournament­high 143 mph and two that he hit with an underarm motion.

These two couldn’t even agree on whether Kyrgios is capable of winning major championsh­ips.

Nadal’s take? “With his talent and with his serve, he can win a Grand Slam, of course.”

And Kyrgios’ selfassess­ment? “I know what I’m capable of. Just depends. I’m a great tennis player, but I don’t do the other stuff. I’m not the most profession­al guy. I won’t train day in, day out. I won’t show up every day. So there are a lot of things I need to improve on to get to that level that Rafa brings. … But, no, at the moment I don’t think I can contend for a Grand Slam.”

Kyrgios, his shirt collar popped just so, seemed to act at times as if it were more important to look cool than to play well. The betweenthe­legs shots, the unnecessar­y leaping backhands and all the rest. On the initial point of the pivotal fourthset tiebreaker, he jumped high for a showy overhead instead of making a safer putaway. The result? He deposited his shot ball in the net, then rolled his eyes and chucked away a ball. Soon, the match was over.

Much earlier, he had several loud arguments with chair umpire Damien Dumusois, complainin­g about all sorts of things, including how long Nadal took between points and whether the official was seeking too much attention. During the match, Kyrgios earned a warning for unsportsma­nlike conduct after calling Dumusois a “disgrace.” At his news conference, Kyrgios’ insults of choice were “horrendous” and “terrible.”

In the third set, there was that “dangerous” ball — Nadal’s word — he sent toward the Spaniard, who blocked it with his racket at the last second. Perhaps startled, Nadal doublefaul­ted on the next point. But he wound up holding serve, then celebratin­g like he’d won the match, leaping and yelling and punching the air. When he eventually did seal the victory, Nadal wagged a finger and shouted and fistpumped some more.

Asked by a reporter why he didn’t say sorry at the time, Kyrgios replied: “I didn’t hit him. Hit his racket, no? Why would I apologize? I won the point. … I mean, the dude has got how many Slams, how much money in the bank account? I think he can take a ball to the chest, bro.”

 ?? Daniel Leal-olivas / AFP / Getty Images ?? Australia’s Nick Kyrgios has words with umpire Damien Dumusois during a break in his match.
Daniel Leal-olivas / AFP / Getty Images Australia’s Nick Kyrgios has words with umpire Damien Dumusois during a break in his match.

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