Kyrgios suffers taste of bagel in Miami capitulation
The mercurial but ring-rusty Australian had admitted he had no idea how his injury-prone racquet wrist was going to pull up in a second match in three days after his encouraging first-round victory over Mackenzie Macdonald, his first tour-level victory in two-and-a-half years.
But the Hard Rock Stadium crowd were soon to find out on Friday as Kyrgios began by going punch-for-punch with one of the world's best, only to wholly run out of steam - and, seemingly, belief - as he delivered a dismal second-set performance in which he mustered just seven points.
Classic Karen 🙌@karenkhachanov defeats Nick Kyrgios 7-6 6-0 to reach round 3. #MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/iUNAMNXXDJ
— Tennis TV (@TennisTV) March 21, 2025
In an odd performance which showed off the familiar Jekyll-and-Hyde faces of the former Wimbledon finalist, there was much to applaud about the way the 29-year-old mixed it with the Russian 22nd seed, taking Khachanov to a tiebreak in a feisty opening-set display.
But after he missed a chance to go 3-1 up in the tiebreak, making a mess of a forehand and allowing Khachanov take control, it was as if he became a different player, perhaps recognising that to win two more sets was going to be a mountain too high to climb in his physical state.
Sure enough, Khachanov began to bully him, with Kyrgios just getting more irritated with himself and his team at courtside, offering a running commentary on everything that was bothering him, which appeared to include a problem with his shoulder.
He smashed one ball high out of court to earn a warning from the chair as the ferocity of his first-set hitting gave way to the casual, sloppy strokemaking of someone perhaps hurting and recognising there was no way back.
When he hit a forehand long, his 30th unforced error, he was eventually put out of his misery, the second set having lasted just 21 minutes, compared to the first which had been nearly an hour-long battle.
It was a performance that offered just a tantalising glimpse of the brilliance Kyrgios can still produce against a player of the quality of world No.23 Khachanov, who was his last opponent in a grand slam back at the US Open in 2022 when the Russian won a much more competitive affair.
Yet ultimately, his conditioning after all his injury setbacks is still clearly nowhere near good enough for him to rattle the very best as Khachanov moved on to a clash with Grigor Dimitrov in the last-32.
Kyrgios's fellow Australian, Perth qualifier Tristan Schoolkate had earlier also gone out at the second-round stage, beaten by Canadian Felix Auger-Aliassime 6-4 6-4.
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