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Kyrgios booed off court following controversial early exit at Australian Open

The 14th seed looked in command with a two-set lead before a familiar meltdown in the third set.

Australian Open Tennis Nick Kyrgios pictured during his second round match against Andreas Seppi at the Australian Open. Aaron Favila Aaron Favila

BAD BOY NICK Kyrgios was booed off court and accused of giving up as he crashed out of the Australian Open second round in a stormy five-set defeat to Andreas Seppi on Wednesday.

In a madcap match, 14th seed Kyrgios looked in command with a two sets lead before a familiar meltdown in the third set changed the complexion of the contest.

The 89th-ranked Seppi, who saved a match point, advanced to a third-round match with Belgium’s Steve Darcis with a 1-6, 6-7 (1/7), 6-4, 6-2, 10-8 win in three hours, nine minutes. Kyrgios was booed off the court by some of the fans, while tennis great John McEnroe hit out at the brash youngster.

“What I don’t understand, what I can’t accept, is when he stops trying. It’s a black eye for the sport,” McEnroe said during television match commentary.

Kyrgios said of McEnroe’s criticism: “My body was sore. I was hurting. I mean, John McEnroe. Good on him. Great career. Good on him.”

Kyrgios was also dismissive of the booing, saying: “Yes, obviously it’s not the greatest thing to hear. 10-8 in the fifth, getting booed off, definitely not the best feeling.”

While there were mixed feelings over Krygios’ stormy exit, Seppi was savouring a memorable victory after losing in five sets to the Australian on the same court at the 2015 Australian Open.

“Maybe it was meant to be. It was a tough match and I didn’t start well. I could not get the rhythm but I started to play better,” he said. “Last time I was two sets up and lost and I tried to do the same this time. I kept on fighting and did very well in the important moments at the end.”

Australian Open Tennis Kyrgios congratulates Seppi at the end of the match. Aaron Favila Aaron Favila

Kyrgios is making his return from a ban for “lack of best efforts” — commonly known as ‘tanking’ — during a match in Shanghai, and has been seeing a psychologist. But yet again Kyrgios’ brittle temperament snapped during the third set as Seppi came storming back after looking out for the count.

Asked how he collapsed so spectacularly, Kyrgios told reporters: “Poor management, I guess. I think I didn’t have the best preparation. It’s on me. I did a couple things in the off-season that I’m probably not going to do next time. My body’s not in good enough shape. You live and you learn.”

Kyrgios was given a warning for an audible obscenity by chair umpire Carlos Ramos before he bounced his racquet angrily into the court after a break of service. Ramos docked him a point penalty as Seppi served out for the third set to turn the tide against the volatile Australian.

The 32-year-old Italian maintained his composure and seized the advantage as Kyrgios suddenly switched off. Instead of regathering his composure, Kyrgios rushed through his service games, giving away cheap points.

Unflappable Seppi quickly levelled the match and took it into a fifth set after earlier looking headed for a straight-sets exit. Kyrgios rallied and held three break points at 4-3, only for Seppi to save them all and level as the home crowd exhorted every point from the Australian.

Kyrgios held a match point at 8-7 but Seppi saved with a magnificent deep forehand winner before the Australian double-faulted on break point to give Seppi his winning chance.

Seppi brought up two match points at 9-8 and won with an ace, dumping Kyrgios out of his home Grand Slam after two rounds.

– © AFP 2017

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