Beaten but unbowed, Kyrgios leaves his mark on Wimbledon final
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[July 11, 2022]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - Nick Kyrgios did not disappoint in his maiden
Grand slam final as the Australian brought his extraordinary brand
of improvised tennis theatre to the world's greatest tennis stage on
Sunday.
Wimbledon finals are revered like no others but the 27-year-old
Kyrgios was never going to let the enormity of the occasion stifle
his showman instincts in a clash with six-times champion Novak
Djokovic.
In dazzling sunshine, he played mesmerising tennis and had top seed
Djokovic under his spell in a first set of outstanding quality
before buckling under the relentless accuracy of the Serb to go down
4-6 6-3 6-4 7-6(3) in three absorbing hours.
The 15,000 people crammed into Centre Court, including the Duke and
Duchess of Cambridge and their son George, did not have to wait long
for the fireworks to start.
Kyrgios produced an underarm serve on the fourth point of his first
service game, then a sublime tweener in the eighth game -- losing
both points but having the crowd in raptures.
He belted down 30 aces, and at times made shots with a high degree
of difficulty look ridiculously easy.
But there was also the dark side and an audible obscenity warning in
the third set after ranting about a heckling female fan.
"Looks like she's had 700 drinks bro," Kyrgios shouted at umpire
Renaud Lichtenstein.
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Asked later about the incident, he said: "I don't
need someone absolutely smashed talking to me point in, point out.
Do you know what I mean?
"I've been on a couple nights out in my life, and I knew that she
had too many. I told the umpire, she's speaking to me a lot, she's
drunk. What are you going to do about it?"
In the heat of battle, Kyrgios also vented his frustration at his
entourage, letting rip when he dropped serve at 4-4 in the third set
having led 40-0 -- a game that proved crucial.
Sitting on his chair at the changeover he yelled across the court,
accusing his team, sat close by the Royal guests, of not offering
him enough support. "Why? Why?" he shouted repeatedly.
But there were none of the really unsavoury antics
that have blighted his career and the Centre Court crowd were
roaring him on in the fourth set, hoping for a decider.
Kyrgios began the tournament with a fine for spitting towards a fan
following his first-round victory over Paul Jubb and again after a
toxic third-round clash with fourth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas.
But for the second week of the tournament he largely let his tennis
do the talking and the hope is that he will continue to blend the
ingredients of his special game and colourful personality to
challenge again for a Grand Slam title.
"I'm not behind the eight ball at all. I played a slam final against
one of the greatest of all time, and I was right there," Kyrgios
said. " It was a hell of an occasion."
(Reporting by Martyn Herman, editing by Ed Osmond)
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