LONDON — By the middle of the fourth set of Thursday’s second-round match at Wimbledon evening, the ending seemed inevitable. Nick Kyrgios was clinging to his serve, the last thing he had left, like a shipwrecked sailor clutching a life preserver. Meanwhile, Rafael Nadal lashed and pounded him, unrelenting as an angry sea.
It seemed only a matter of time before the 24-year-old Australian would be dislodged and pulled under — and out of the draw. But things had not always played out as expected for Nadal on Wimbledon’s lawns, where Kyrgios himself had already been the author of Nadal’s demise once. That was in 2014 when, as a wild card ranked No. 144, he upset top-ranked Nadal. It was the tournament that vaulted Kyrgios to fame.
So even as Nadal led 6-3, 3-6, 7-5 (5), 4-all, it was not inconceivable that Kyrgios’s massive serve would still save the day for him. But Nadal kept buffeting. He had Kyrgios folding up like a cheap jack-knife as he lunged to return Nadal’s pinpoint serves, hobbling from one court to the other with his head bowed. Nadal ratcheted up the rallies and sustained a brutal degree of pressure until Kyrgios finally cracked in the final, fourth-set tiebreaker, which Nadal won 7-3.
“He plays every point,” Kyrgios said when asked to describe what he admires most about Nadal. “He doesn’t take one point off. I feel like we’re the polar opposites. I struggle so hard to just play every point with a routine, have the same patterns. His ability to bring it every day and compete, it’s special. It’s not easy.”