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Calmer Kyrgios roars into last eight

Unpredictable Aussie extends whirlwind Wimbledon run

China Daily | Updated: 2022-07-06 09:00
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Australia's Nick Kyrgios celebrates winning a point against American Brandon Nakashima during their fourth-round match at Wimbledon on Monday. AFP

Nick Kyrgios stepped into a nearly full Centre Court to polite applause on Monday lunchtime, exited about 3 1/2 hours later to a louder ovation and, somehow, the 100-year-old stadium survived the experience.

In the warm-up period, Kyrgios flicked a ball between his legs and closed with an underarm serve, hardly standard procedure. During the 4-6, 6-4, 7-6 (2), 3-6, 6-2 victory at Wimbledon over unseeded American Brandon Nakashima that followed, putting Kyrgios in a Grand Slam quarterfinal for the first time in seven and a half years, he tried those sorts of trick shots a few times. Afterward, he ditched his rule-conforming but backward, brim-bent white cap and white shoes in favor of red versions.

"Because," he explained when pressed about the sartorial choices, "I do what I want."

Yet, somehow, those seated in the Royal Box never turned their backs in protest. And, somehow, the grass-court tournament that dates to the 1880s did not grind to a halt.

Maybe that's simply because, in addition to smacking 35 aces and "ripping the ball from the baseline"-to use Nakashima's words-despite a shoulder that hurt so much he took painkilling pills and received repeated treatment from a trainer, Kyrgios displayed a much quieter, much calmer demeanor than the guy who earned fines of $10,000 for spitting in the direction of a heckling spectator at the end of his first-round match and $4,000 for an audible obscenity during his tempestuous win against No 4 seed Stefanos Tsitsipas in the third round.

"I was able to just say, 'Wow, look how far I've come,' to myself. I was bouncing the ball before I served; I really just smiled to myself," said Kyrgios, owner of a tour-high 11 victories on grass this season.

"I was like, 'We're here, we're competing at Wimbledon, putting in a good performance mentally. It was rewarding."

The unseeded Kyrgios, now 6-0 in five-setters at the All England Club, next faces unseeded Cristian Garin, a 26-year-old from Chile who saved a pair of match points and authored the first two-set comeback of this year's tournament to defeat No 19 seed Alex de Minaur 2-6, 5-7, 7-6 (3), 6-4, 7-6 (6) after more than four and a half hours.

The other quarterfinal on their half of the draw is 22-time Grand Slam champion Rafael Nadal against No 11 Taylor Fritz. Nadal got past No 21 seed Botic van de Zandschulp 6-4, 6-2, 7-6(6), while Fritz, a 24-year-old American, earned his major quarterfinal debut with a 6-3, 6-1, 6-4 victory over qualifier Jason Kubler.

"Doesn't even seem real," said Fritz, who hasn't dropped a set in the tournament.

Kubler, who also is Australian, offered his take on Kyrgios.

"Every time I see him, he's smiling. Every time I'm around him, it seems like I'm laughing," Kubler said. "So it's kind of weird when I read or see the comments about him, knowing him the way I do. He's just one of those people if you were to hang around him or spend any sort of quality time with him, you'd fall in love with him."

For Kyrgios, never one to follow a conventional path, it's been a much longer road.

His two previous Slam quarterfinals came at age 19-at Wimbledon in 2014 and the Australian Open in 2015.

The Aussie spoke about feeling like a veteran at 27, and his self-description Monday included the words "composed" and "mature".

Not terms generally associated with Kyrgios, but as he told reporters at his news conference: "None of you really know me at all. Like, you don't hang out with me at all. You only kind of see what you see on the court. It's always been a bit of a roller coaster. So I understand how it's mixed reviews.... People just love to just have an opinion."

Making the case that he's a changed man, Kyrgios thought back to a second-round loss to Nadal at Centre Court in 2019 and recalled: "My agent had to come get me out of a pub at 4 am... I've come a long way, that's for sure."

Certainly since Saturday, at least, when he repeatedly argued with the chair umpire and a Grand Slam supervisor, and eliciting accusations from Tsitsipas of being a "bully" and having "a very evil side". It's the sort of ruckus Kyrgios has raised before, earning ejections and suspensions, and causing people to wonder whether his enormous talent would ever carry him to the closing weekend of a major.

"Obviously," the 20-year-old Nakashima said. "You never really know what's going to happen with him out there."

Nakashima evened things by taking the fourth set with a break, then went up 1-0 in the fifth. Kyrgios acknowledged handing over the fourth with an eye to disrupting his foe. Seemed to work: He earned five games in a row, before serving it out and closing this way from love-30: cross-court forehand passing winner; hanging on in an 11-stroke exchange until an admittedly fatigued Nakashima missed a backhand; 134 mph (216 kph) service winner; forehand volley winner.

When it was over, Kyrgios pounded his chest with his fist, shouted with a curse word mixed in and turned to his guest box-which included his girlfriend and his support team, whom he credits with helping him be a better person off the court, but not a full-time coach, because he doesn't have one.

"I need a glass of wine, for sure, tonight," Kyrgios told the crowd during his on-court interview. "For sure."

Agencies via Xinhua

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