Nadal ousts Kyrgios from Australian Open
Nick Kyrgios stages a tremendous fight before bowing out to world No.1 Rafael Nadal in the fourth round of Australian Open 2020.
Melbourne, Australia, 27 January 2020 | Darren Walton (AAP)
There were none of the expected fireworks, just compelling tennis, as Rafael Nadal ended Nick Kyrgios’ gallant Australian Open campaign with an enthralling four-set, fourth-round victory at Melbourne Park.
One of the most anticipated matches of the Open was played out in good spirits between the two rivals, as Nadal prevailed 6-3 3-6 7-6(6) 7-6(4) in a centre-court thriller.
The world No.1’s reward is a quarterfinal meeting on Wednesday with fifth seed Dominic Thiem in what will be a sequel to the past two French Open finals won by the Spaniard.
“It was a very tough match. Since like in the beginning I was a little bit under control (but) against Nick you are never under control,” Nadal said after denying Kyrgios by the exact same scoreline as he did last year at Wimbledon.
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In a touching tribute to Kobe Bryant, Kyrgios entered into Rod Laver Arena in a LA Lakers No.8 singlet, seemingly in tears, and proudly warmed up in it.
The passionate NBA fan started sluggishly, dropping serve in the fourth game as Nadal parcelled up the opening set in 36 minutes.
Saturday night’s four-hour, 26-minute epic against Karen Khachanov, the longest match of Kyrgios’s career, looked to have taken a toll.
He had to stave off three more break points in the opening game of the second set, before suddenly exploding to life.
The fist-pumping underdog leapt into the air in jubilation after breaking Nadal with an inch-perfect lob and surging to a 4-1 lead.
The advantage was enough for Kyrgios to level the match at one set apiece.
Fighting desperately to become the first Australian to conquer the top seed at Melbourne Park since Mark Philippoussis brought down Pete Sampras in 1996, Kyrgios threw his body at everything as the pair went toe to toe.
But there wasn’t a hint of bad blood, Nadal even giving Kyrgios the thumbs up at one point when the gallant home hope lay prone on Rod Laver Arena after an exhausting 24-shot rally.
Recording 25 aces, Kyrgios saved his worst serve for the pivotal third-set tiebreaker, gifting Nadal a set point with a wild double-fault.
Nadal incredibly returned the favour, only for Kyrgios to net a backhand to hand the top seed the set.
The writing seemed on the wall when he dropped serve for a second time to fall behind 3-1 in the fourth set.
But he made one last stand, breaking Nadal when the Spaniard served for the match at 5-4 in the fourth set.
It was merely a stay of execution, Nadal again holding his nerve in the breaker to advance to his 41st grand slam quarter-final after three hours and 38 minutes.
“I just feel happy that I won one more match tonight, an important one,” said the 19-times major champion.
“That gives me the possibility to keep going on this tournament. Possibility to play one more time on this amazing court and that makes me happy – what more can I say?”
A quarterfinalist in 2015, Kyrgios must console himself with a projected return to the world’s top 20 for the first time since August of 2018 after bowing out in the fourth round for the second time in the past three years.
“When he is playing like today with this positive factor, he gives a lot of positive things to our sport,” Nadal said.
“I encourage him to keep working like that, because he is one of the highest talents.”