Australia oust Britain in
knife-edge ATP Cup quarter-final
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[January 09, 2020]
By Jonathan Barrett
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Untested Australia
doubles pairing Alex De Minaur and Nick Kyrgios saved four match
points before sealing a nail-biting win in the deciding match of
their quarter-final clash with Great Britain at the inaugural ATP
Cup team event on Thursday.
The Australian duo, better known for their singles play, defeated
doubles specialists Jamie Murray and Joe Salisbury 3-6 6-3 18-16 to
set up a semi-final against either Rafael Nadal-led Spain or David
Goffin's Belgium.
In something resembling both a hug and a wrestle, De Minaur and
Kyrgios fell to the ground in a celebratory embrace after edging the
half hour-long extended tiebreak, used in place of a deciding third
set.
"That was the most stressful tie-breaker I've ever been involved
in," Kyrgios said in an on-court interview after the match. "I'll
definitely be having a couple of red wines tonight."
The pair were subbed in by team captain Lleyton Hewitt at the last
moment after the teams split the two singles matches, a decision he
attributed to Kyrgios' irresistible form.
While Kyrgios' on-court behaviour often raised hackles, few handle
pressure moments as well as he did on Thursday. Facing a match point
in the doubles tiebreak, he ripped a backhand winner off a serve
down a narrow gap.
SPLIT RESULT
Earlier, Kyrgios was too strong for London-based left-hander Cameron
Norrie, winning 6-2 6-2, while Britain's Dan Evans then outlasted
the top 20-ranked De Minaur 6-7(4) 6-4 7-6(2).
Kyrgios said after his comfortable victory that he wasn't happy with
his serving rhythm, although he did successfully use an underarm
serve that appeared to confuse his British opponent, who was looking
out for the tactic to be redeployed throughout the match.
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Australia's Alex de Minaur and Nick Kyrgios celebrate during their
Quarter Final doubles match against Britain's Jamie Murray and Joe
Salisbury REUTERS/Ciro De Luca
"Anytime in a match where the opponent stops thinking about what he
needs to do ...I think I have an edge straight away," said Kyrgios.
Krygios has previously employed the obscure but long-used tactic,
notably against Nadal, the world's top player, who has criticised
the Australian's on-court behaviour.
"If it gets in Rafa's head, then it's a success," Kyrgios said after
Thursday's match.
De Minaur and Evans split the opening sets, setting up a third set
contest that went to a tiebreak. Britain's top player used his
all-court game to press his younger opponent, and successfully
employed serve-and-volley tactics at key moments.
De Minaur saved four match points before Evans eventually secured a
morale-boosting victory weeks out from the Australian Open.
Hewitt then made the prescient call to put the 20-year-old
immediately back out on court, partnered with Kyrgios, instead of
doubles specialists.
"You have five minutes to decide after the second singles," said
Hewitt, who added that Kyrgios' form was too good to leave him out
of the deciding match.
(Reporting by Jonathan Barrett in Sydney; editing by John
Stonestreet)
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