Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Nick Kyrgios

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Australian tennis player (born 1995)

Nick Kyrgios
Kyrgios at 2017 Aegon Championships
Full nameNicholas Hilmy Kyrgios
Country (sports) Australia
Residence
Born (1995-04-27)27 April 1995 (age 30)
Height1.93 m (6 ft 4 in)
Turned pro2013
PlaysRight-handed (two-handed backhand)
Prize moneyUS $12,648,790[4]
Official websitenickkyrgios.org
Singles
Career record206–118 (63.7%)
Career titles7
Highest rankingNo. 13 (24 October 2016)[5]
Current rankingNo. 644 (21 August 2025)
Grand Slam singles results
Australian OpenQF (2015)
French Open3R (2015,2016)
WimbledonF (2022)
US OpenQF (2022)
Doubles
Career record69–58 (54.3%)
Career titles4
Highest rankingNo. 11 (7 November 2022)[5]
Current rankingNo. 1292 (23 June 2025)
Grand Slam doubles results
Australian OpenW (2022)
French Open3R (2017)
US Open3R (2016,2022)
Other doubles tournaments
Tour FinalsRR (2022)
Mixed doubles
Career record6–6
Grand Slam mixed doubles results
Australian Open2R (2020)
Wimbledon2R (2015,2021)
US Open2R (2015)
Team competitions
Davis CupSF (2015,2017)
Hopman CupW (2016)
Last updated on: 23 June 2025.

Nicholas Hilmy Kyrgios[6] (/ˈkɪriɒs/KIRR-ee-oss;Greek:Νικόλαος Χίλμι Κύργιος,romanizedNikólaos Chílmi Kírios; born 27 April 1995), nicknamed "Kygs"[7] is an Australian professionaltennis player. Kyrgios has been ranked as high as world No. 13 in singles by theAssociation of Tennis Professionals (ATP), achieved on 24 October 2016.[5] He has won sevenATP Tour singles titles, including the2019 and2022 Washington Open, and reached eleven finals, most notably amajor final at the2022 Wimbledon Championships. In doubles, Kyrgios has a career-high ranking of world No. 11, achieved on 7 November 2022, winning a major doubles title at the2022 Australian Open while partnering withThanasi Kokkinakis.

Kyrgios is only the third player, afterDominik Hrbatý andLleyton Hewitt, to have beaten each one of theBig Three (Novak Djokovic,Roger Federer, andRafael Nadal) the first time he played against them.[8][9] Kyrgios is often described as a "polarising player" because of his "unique, unfiltered and unapologetic personality" which goes alongside his "on-court brilliance and audacious shot-making" in both singles and doubles.[10]

In his junior career, Kyrgios won the singles event at the2013 Australian Open and the doubles events at the2012 French Open,2012 Wimbledon Championships and2013 Wimbledon Championships.

Early life and family

[edit]

Kyrgios was born on 27 April 1995 inCanberra, Australia, to a father ofGreek origin,[11] George,[12][13] and aMalay mother, Norlaila ("Nill").[14][15][12] His father is a self-employed house painter, and his mother is a retired computer engineer.[16][17] His mother was born inMalaysia as a member of thePahang royal family, but she dropped her title as a princess when she moved to Australia in her twenties.[14][18] He has two siblings: a sister, Halimah, and a brother, Christos.[17] Kyrgios's paternal grandparents are from Georgani, a small village inIoannina, Greece; they moved to Australia in 1960.[19]

Kyrgios attendedRadford College until Year 8 and completed his Year 12 certificate in 2012 atDaramalan College in Canberra.[20] He also playedbasketball in his early teens before deciding to focus solely on tennis when he was 14 years old.[21] Two years later, he received a full scholarship at theAustralian Institute of Sport, where he was able to further develop his tennis.

In 2013, Kyrgios relocated his training base from Canberra toMelbourne Park in an attempt to further his career with better facilities and hitting partners.[22] A year later, Tennis ACT announced a $27 million redevelopment of the Lyneham Tennis Centre in Canberra to lure Kyrgios back home and hostDavis Cup andFed Cup ties.[23] Kyrgios confirmed in January 2015 that he would return home and base himself in Canberra. He also donated $10,000 towards the redevelopment of the Lyneham Tennis Centre there.[24][25]

Junior career

[edit]

Kyrgios played his first junior match in 2008 at the age of 13 at a grade 4 tournament in Australia. He won his firstITF junior tour title inFiji in June 2010, aged 15.[26] He started to compete more regularly on the junior tour in 2011, making his junior grand slam debut at the2011 Australian Open. During 2012 he won two junior grand slam doubles titles and rose to junior world number three, though he withdrew from theAustralian Open Men's Wildcard Playoff due to injury.[27]

Moving into 2013, he gained the number 1 junior ranking by defeating Wayne Montgomery in the Traralgon International final.[28] A week later he entered the Australian Open as thejuniors number 3 seed and progressed to the final against fellow AustralianThanasi Kokkinakis. After saving two set points in the first set, Kyrgios won his first and only junior grand slam title.[29] He also won Wimbledon junior doubles with Kokkinakis.

Professional career

[edit]

2012–2013: Turning pro

[edit]

In 2012, in his first-round qualifying match at theAustralian Open, Kyrgios won the first set in a tiebreak, but his opponentMathieu Rodrigues cruised through the second and third sets to defeat him. In March 2012,Ouyang Bowen was the first player that Kyrgios defeated in a professional tournament, at an ITF Futures event, in Japan. Kyrgios continued to compete on the2012 ITF Men's Circuit for the rest of the season, competing in tournaments in Australia, Germany, Japan and Slovenia. At the end of the season, he had reached a semifinal and a quarterfinal in Australian tournaments. He finished the year ranked No. 838.

In 2013, he started the season by playing at the2013 Brisbane International, losing in the first round of qualifying toJames Duckworth. He then lost in the first round of qualifying at the2013 Australian Open toBradley Klahn in straight sets. After winning theBoys' Singles, Kyrgios said his goal was to reach the top 300 by the end of the year.[30]

Kyrgios at the2013 French Open

At the2013 Nature's Way Sydney Tennis International, he defeated fellow AustralianMatt Reid in straight sets in the finals to win his first challenger tour title at the age of 17.[31]

Kyrgios was given a wildcard into the qualifying competition of the2013 French Open, but on 20 May it was announced thatJohn Millman was withdrawing from the main draw due to injury; such that, Kyrgios' wildcard was raised to the main draw. This meant he would compete in a main draw of a Grand Slam tournament for the first time.[32] In the first round Kyrgios had the biggest win of his career to date against the former world No. 8Radek Štěpánek in three sets, each ending in tiebreaks, giving him the first ATP Tour level win of his career.[33] Although he lost toMarin Čilić in the following round, his ranking rose to No. 213.

Kyrgios later qualified for the2013 US Open, where he was beaten by fourth seedDavid Ferrer in his opening match. He reached a new career high ranking of No. 186 on 9 September 2013.[34] In October, Kyrgios made the semifinal of the2013 Sacramento Challenger, before falling toTim Smyczek. He ended the2013 season with a singles ranking of 182.

2014: Wimbledon quarterfinal

[edit]

At the beginning of the2014 season, Kyrgios was set to debut at the2014 Brisbane International as a wildcard,[35] but withdrew due to a shoulder injury.[36] On 8 January, Kyrgios was awarded a wildcard into the2014 Australian Open,[37] where he won his first round match againstBenjamin Becker.[38] However, he lost in the second round toBenoît Paire, in five sets.[39]

Kyrgios received a wildcard into the2014 U.S. National Indoor Tennis Championships, where he lost in the first round toTim Smyczek in three sets.[40] Kyrgios was then forced to withdraw from numerous ATP tournaments inDelray Beach andAcapulco due to an elbow injury.[41]

At the2014 Sarasota Open, Kyrgios reached the final by defeatingJarmere Jenkins,Rubén Ramírez Hidalgo,Donald Young andDaniel Kosakowski. He defeatedFilip Krajinović in straight sets for his second career challenger title.[42] Following this, Kyrgios defeatedJack Sock to win the2014 Savannah Challenger. As a wildcard at the2014 French Open, Kyrgios was defeated in the first round in straight sets byMilos Raonic. Kyrgios then won his fourth career challenger title at the2014 Aegon Nottingham Challenge, beating fellow AustralianSam Groth in straight-set tiebreaks.

Kyrgios at the2014 Wimbledon Championships

In June, Kyrgios received a wildcard to the2014 Wimbledon Championships. After defeatingStéphane Robert in the first round, he went on to beatRichard Gasquet in a five-set second-round thriller; wherein, he lost the first two sets and saved nine match points. In the third round, Kyrgios beatJiří Veselý, before going on to get the biggest win of his career so far by beating World No. 1Rafael Nadal in four sets –– becoming the first male debutant to reach the Wimbledon quarterfinals sinceFlorian Mayer, in 2004. The 'shot of the match' was a rear-forehand, half-volley winner from between Kyrgios' legs that David Polkinghorne, ofThe Canberra Times, called "freakish" and "audacious".[43][44] Kyrgios subsequently lost toMilos Raonic in four sets in the quarterfinals. This Wimbledon performance helped Kyrgios make it into the top 100 of the ATP World Rankings for the first time in his career:[45] i.e. Kyrgios' ranking rose to No. 66.[46]Post-Wimbledon, at the Rogers Cup tournament in Toronto, Kyrgios earned his first ATP World Tour Masters event win, with a first round victory overSantiago Giraldo in straight sets.[47] However, Kyrgios lost in the second round toAndy Murray, winning just four games.[48]

In theUS Open, Kyrgios made it to the third round, defeatingMikhail Youzhny andAndreas Seppi on his way, before losing to 16th seedTommy Robredo. Kyrgios later played in the Malaysian Open, but lost in the first round.

He skipped the rest of the season, citing burnout. He ended the year ranked No. 52 in the world, and the No. 2 ranked Australian behindLleyton Hewitt.

2015: First final, top 30

[edit]
Kyrgios in 2015

Kyrgios started the season off at theSydney International, but lost his opening match againstJerzy Janowicz in three tightly contested sets.

During the2015 Australian Open, Kyrgios received direct entry into the tournament for the first time due to his ranking. In his opening match, he defeatedFederico Delbonis in a five-set thriller, before going on to beatIvo Karlović andMalek Jaziri in second and third rounds, respectively. He then facedAndreas Seppi, who had just beatenRoger Federer in his previous match, in the fourth round. Kyrgios fell two sets behind and faced down a match point in the fourth set but recovered to win in five sets. As a result, Kyrgios became the first male teenager to reach two Grand Slam quarterfinals since Federer in 2001,[49] the first Australian male to reach the quarterfinals since Hewitt in2005, and the first Australian of any gender to reach the quarterfinals sinceJelena Dokic in2009.[50] In the quarterfinals, Kyrgios lost to eventual finalistAndy Murray in straight sets. After the tournament, he reached a career-high ranking of no. 35 in the world.[51]

He later withdrew from tournaments inMarseille andDubai due to a back injury he suffered during theAustralian Open.[52] In Indian Wells, he served for the match againstGrigor Dimitrov, but rolled his ankle and ultimately lost.

Kyrgios returned in theBarcelona Open. After receiving a bye in the first round, he lost in three sets to fellow 19-year-oldElias Ymer.At theEstoril Open, Kyrgios reached the final of an ATP tournament for the first time in his career, after defeatingAlbert Ramos Viñolas,Filip Krajinović,Robin Haase andPablo Carreño Busta. He then lost the final toRichard Gasquet, in straight sets.

At theMadrid Open a week later, Kyrgios defeated world No. 2 and 17-time Grand Slam championRoger Federer in the second round, after saving two match points in the final set tiebreak.[53] He then had a three-set loss toJohn Isner in the third round.[54] At this point, until his finalist appearance at Estoril and third round finish in Madrid, Kyrgios had the unique distinction of having won more Grand Slam matches (10) than ATP Tour matches (2).

At theFrench Open, Kyrgios was seeded 29th, his first Grand Slam seeding. He won in straight sets in the first round againstDenis Istomin.[55] He then received a walkover into the third round, afterKyle Edmund withdrew with injury.[56] In the third round, he lost in straight sets to third seedAndy Murray.[57] Inthe doubles, Kyrgios and partnerMahesh Bhupathi lost in the first round to wildcardsThanasi Kokkinakis andLucas Pouille.[58]

Wimbledon 2015: Madison Keys & Nick Kyrgios during their 1st round match against Barbora Strycova & Jurgen Melzer

At the2015 Wimbledon Championships, Kyrgios opened with straight-set victories overDiego Schwartzman andJuan Mónaco in the first and second rounds, respectively.[59][60] In the third round, despite losing the first set, he advanced past seventh seedMilos Raonic ––before losing toGasquet in the fourth round, squandering set points in the fourth. He also played mixed doubles withMadison Keys, but only reached the second round. Kyrgios fell out of the top 40 in the rankings following the tournament.[61]

2016: Hopman Cup champion, 3 titles, top 15

[edit]

At the2016 Hopman Cup, Kyrgios partnered withDaria Gavrilova, as part of the Australia Green team. During the round robin, Australia Green won 3–0 against Germany, with Kyrgios winning both his singles match againstAlexander Zverev and mixed doubles match with Gavrilova. The Australian Green team next faced off against Great Britain; where Kyrgios recorded his first-ever win overAndy Murray (in straight sets) and also won the doubles, claiming a 2–1 win over the British team. Following this, he went on to win the Hopman Cup alongside Gavrilova, defeating Ukraine in the final – marking Kyrgios' first title on the World Tour.

At the2016 Australian Open he claimed straight-set wins overPablo Carreño Busta andPablo Cuevas before losing to sixth-rankedTomáš Berdych in the third round in 4 sets.

Kyrgios won his maiden ATP title at theOpen 13 inMarseille by defeatingRichard Gasquet in the quarterfinal,Berdych in the semi-final and lastly,Čilić in the final, all in straight sets. Notably, Kyrgios finished the tournament without having his serve broken.

During theDubai Tennis Championships Kyrgios reached the semifinals, where he retired againstStan Wawrinka. At the2016 Indian Wells tournament, he lost in the first round toAlbert Ramos Viñolas.

At the2016 Miami Open Kyrgios reached his firstATP World Tour Masters 1000 semifinal, with straight-set wins overMarcos Baghdatis,Tim Smyczek,Andrey Kuznetsov andMilos Raonic – before losing in the semis toKei Nishikori. Following Miami Open, Kyrgios entered the top 20 for the first time, becoming the youngest player to do so sinceČilić seven years earlier.

At theFrench Open, Kyrgios entered as the 14th seed and went on to beatMarco Cecchinato andIgor Sijsling, reaching the third round; however, he lost to 9th seed Gasquet. Similarly, atWimbledon (as the 15th seed), he advanced to the fourth round after defeatingRadek Štěpánek,Dustin Brown andFeliciano López – losing to eventual championMurray.

InAtlanta, as the second seed, Kyrgios advanced to the final after defeating wildcardJared Donaldson,Fernando Verdasco andYoshihito Nishioka. In the final, Kyrgios faced three-time defending champion Isner and defeated him to win his secondATP title. Kyrgios reached a career-high ranking of No. 16 following the tournament.

Kyrgios playing at the2016 US Open

At theUS Open, Kyrgios reached the third round againstIllya Marchenko before retiring with a hip injury that had also affected him in previous rounds. He returned with a straight-set win in his rubber for Australia in theDavis Cup World Group playoff.

In October, after a second-round loss toKevin Anderson at the2016 Chengdu Open, Kyrgios bounced back by winning his firstATP World Tour 500 series title in Tokyo, at the2016 Japan Open Tennis Championships, beatingDavid Goffin.

2017: First Masters final

[edit]

At the2017 Australian Open, Kyrgios was seeded 14th. He defeatedGastão Elias before falling toAndreas Seppi in round two, despite leading by two sets to love. At theMexican Open, Kyrgios defeatedNovak Djokovic in straight sets in the quarter-finals. Djokovic managed to win just 20.5% of return points in the match, his lowest ever in a tour match. Kyrgios fell to eventual championSam Querrey in 3 sets in the semifinals. Kyrgios defeated Djokovic again in straight sets in the fourth round of theIndian Wells Masters tournament. He then withdrew from his quarterfinal match with Federer due to illness. He moved toMiami, where he beat Goffin and Zverev before losing in the semifinals in three tiebreak sets to Federer in three hours and ten minutes. His match against Federer is considered one of the greatest non-grand slam matches ever, due to its high quality and contrast in styles and personalities.[62]

Kyrgios then participated in Madrid, where he lost in straight sets in the third round to Nadal. At Roland Garros, Kyrgios lost toKevin Anderson in the second round after winning the first set. He then withdrew from his first-round matches at Queen's Club, Wimbledon and Washington due to injuries. After his recent slump in form, Kyrgios then reached the third round of theNational Bank Open, where he lost to Zverev in straight sets. In theCincinnati Masters, Kyrgios made it to the quarterfinals, where he defeated world No. 2 Nadal in straight sets. He followed that up with a victory over Ferrer to reach his firstMasters 1000 final, where he lost toGrigor Dimitrov in straight sets. At theChina Open, he was crushed by Nadal in the final. Kyrgios's record against Nadal fell to 2–3 with this loss.

In the inaugural2017 Laver Cup, Kyrgios competed for Team World, replacingMilos Raonic following his withdrawal from the tournament.[63] In doubles, Kyrgios partnered withJack Sock, defeating Tomas Berdych andRafael Nadal and earning Team World's only point on Day 1.[64] In singles, Kyrgios defeatedTomáš Berdych, earning Team World's only points on Day 2.[64] Kyrgios went on to play a match tie-break withRoger Federer on Day 3, which would have forced a deciding doubles match.[65] However, Federer defended the match point and went on to win: resulting in an overall victory for Team Europe (15–9).[65]

2018: First Australian title; French Open absence

[edit]

In his first tournament of the season at the2018 Brisbane International, Kyrgios won his first ever tournament on home soil.[66] Kyrgios received a bye into the second round due to being the 3rd seed. In his first competitive match since the2017 European Open, Kyrgios lost the first set to his compatriotMatthew Ebden in a tiebreak but found his form and won in three sets. He reached the final, defeatingRyan Harrison with 17 aces to win his first title sinceTokyo 2016. The win returned him to the top 20, at no. 17.

In the third round of the2018 Australian Open, Kyrgios defeatedJo-Wilfried Tsonga in four sets. He was then beaten byGrigor Dimitrov in a tight four setter, with the latter winning three tiebreaks.[67] Kyrgios served 36 aces in that match.[68]

After the Australian Open,Alexander Zverev defeated Kyrgios in four sets at the Davis Cup. It was soon revealed that he was playing with an elbow injury. In light of this, he cancelled appearances at the Delray Beach Open and Indian Wells Masters tournament. He resumed his season at the Miami Open, defeatingDušan Lajović andFabio Fognini in straight sets before falling to Zverev in straight sets.[69] Kyrgios weathered a lackluster clay season and did not play at the French Open, citing the elbow injury that spoiled the first quarter of 2018.[70]

His next tournament, theStuttgart Open, saw him reach the semifinals, falling to eventual champion Federer.[71] After Stuttgart, Kyrgios entered the Queen's Club Championships. He won his first-round match over former world No. 1 Murray. This was notable as it was Murray's return to the tour since Wimbledon 2017 and Kyrgios's first professional win over Murray after five prior attempts. He was defeated in the semifinals by Čilić in two tiebreaks. At Wimbledon, Kyrgios defeated Istomin and Haase but lost to Nishikori in straight sets in the third round.

His campaign in the2018 US Open generated controversy. In his second-round match, Kyrgios appeared to be given advice by umpire Mohammed Lahyani that seemed to turn the tide in his match againstPierre-Hugues Herbert, which he won. Kyrgios's US Open run ended in the next round with a loss to Federer, who saw him out in straight sets.

At the annual Laver Cup, Kyrgios was defeated by Federer in straight sets. He then won the doubles with Jack Sock against Grigor Dimitrov and David Goffin. His last event on the ATP tour was a wildcard draw at the Kremlin Cup. He defeatedAndrey Rublev in three sets before withdrawing against his next opponent,Mirza Bašić, citing an elbow injury. He also revealed weeks later that he was seeing psychologists to improve his mental health.

2019: Two titles, a default, and a suspension

[edit]

Kyrgios began 2019 at the Brisbane International, where, in a rematch of last year's final, he defeatedRyan Harrison in the round of 32. He subsequently lost toJérémy Chardy. His middling performance in his home country culminated in a straight-sets opening round loss toMilos Raonic at the2019 Australian Open.[72]

Kyrgios won the2019 Mexican Open in Acapulco (his fifth title), after beating three top 10 players (Nadal, Isner and Zverev) and three-time Grand Slam championStan Wawrinka, en route.[73] During his Miami Open campaign his victory overDušan Lajović in the third round involved two successful underarm serves but was followed-up by a loss toBorna Ćorić in the round of 16.

In Rome, Kyrgios beatDaniil Medvedev but then lost his next match toCasper Ruud by default in the third set when he threw a chair on the court after swearing at a linesperson.[74] AtWimbledon, Kyrgios defeated compatriotJordan Thompson in a five-setter, but then lost to Nadal in four sets in the second round which was described as an entertaining encounter and a genuinely great match.[75]

Kyrgios won his sixth title inWashington beating two top 10 players en route. He overcame first seedStefanos Tsitsipas in the semi-final in three sets, and third seedDaniil Medvedev in the final in straight sets.[76] At theUS Open, Kyrgios progressed to the third round where he lost toAndrey Rublev in straight sets.[77] At the annual Laver Cup, Kyrgios was again defeated by Federer, this time in a closer three-set match with a deciding match tiebreak. He teamed up with Jack Sock once again for the doubles, which they won against Rafael Nadal and Stefanos Tsitsipas.[78]

Following the incident at the 2019 Cincinnati Masters tournament, where Kyrgios was fined $113,000 for five separate incidents of unsportsmanlike conduct, the ATP conducted an investigation into his behaviour. The investigation ended on September 26, and he was issued a 16-week suspended ban, a $25,000 fine, and a six-month probationary period.[79][80]

2020: Longest career match

[edit]

At the2020 Australian Open, Kyrgios was seeded 23rd. In the first round, he beatLorenzo Sonego in straight sets before defeatingGilles Simon in four sets in the second round. In the third round, he defeatedKaren Khachanov in the longest match of both his career and the 2020 Australian Open, lasting 4 hours and 26 minutes. He then playedRafael Nadal in the fourth round, which he lost in four sets. Kyrgios played alongsideAmanda Anisimova in themixed doubles, where they ended up losing in the second round.[81]

At the2020 Mexican Open, Kyrgios attempted to defend his2019 title, but retired from his first round match againstUgo Humbert, due to a wrist injury.[82] Kyrgios withdrew from the2020 US Open, choosing to avoid taking health risks amid theCOVID-19 pandemic.[83]

Kyrgios ended 2020 with a singles rank of No. 45.

2021: Tournament withdrawals, knee injury

[edit]

At the2021 Australian Open, Kyrgios lost in the third round toDominic Thiem despite at one stage leading by two sets to love.

Kyrgios playing at the2021 Australian Open

In April, Kyrgios announced he would play in theMallorca Open.[84] He followed this by also announcing that he would play in the Stuttgart Open, but withdrew from both tournaments.[85][86] He enteredWimbledon to continue his return to competitive tennis, and won his opening match against 21st-seeded Ugo Humbert in a five-set match that stretched out over two days. In the second round Kyrgios beatGianluca Mager in straight sets. In the third round againstFélix Auger-Aliassime, with the match tied at one set each, he retired after the second set due to an abdominal injury.[87]

Kyrgios failed to defend his title inWashington, losing in the first round toMackenzie McDonald in straight sets. At theUS Open, he lost in the first round toRoberto Bautista Agut in straight sets.

Kyrgios then competed for Team World at theLaver Cup for the fourth consecutive year. He lost his singles match toStefanos Tsitsipas and partnered withJohn Isner in doubles, where they lost to Tsitsipas andAndrey Rublev. After the conclusion of the Laver Cup, on 28 September 2021, Kyrgios announced he was ending his 2021 season due to a knee injury.[88]

He ended 2021 with a singles ranking of 93.

2022: Grand Slam success and return to top 20

[edit]
This sectionmay betoo long and excessively detailed. Please consider summarising the material.(August 2023)

Kyrgios withdrew from Melbourne due to asthma.[89][90] On January 10, he tested positive for COVID-19 and also had to withdraw from the Sydney Tennis Classic.[91] As a result, he dropped to No. 114 on the ATP rankings, the first time he had been out of the top 100 since June 2014.

At the2022 Australian Open, he won his first round match in straight sets against qualifierLiam Broady. He was subsequently defeated in the second round by top seed Daniil Medvedev over four sets.[92] In doubles, Kyrgios partnered withThanasi Kokkinakis to defeat the world No. 1 doubles team,Nikola Mektić andMate Pavić, en route to the quarter-finals. Following their success in the quarter-finals and semi-finals, this set up the first all-Australian doubles final (since1980) againstMatthew Ebden andMax Purcell. Kyrgios and Kokkinakis won in straight sets, becoming the first all-Australian men's doubles champions (at the Australian Open) sinceThe Woodies in1997.[93] Moreover, Kyrgios and Kokkinakis are the first wildcard pairing in theOpen era to win the Australian Open men's doubles title.[94] As a result, Kyrgios moved to the top 40 in the doubles rankings on 31 January 2022, rising 219 spots.[95]

Kyrgios next received a wildcard into the main draw atIndian Wells, California. He beatSebastián Báez andFederico Delbonis, in straight sets, to get to the third round; where he then beat world No. 8Casper Ruud. He received a walkover in the fourth round following the withdrawal ofJannik Sinner, but then lost in 3 sets toRafael Nadal in the quarterfinals.[96] He had less success in doubles, as he andThanasi Kokkinakis lost in the second round to eventual championsJohn Isner andJack Sock.

InMiami, he advanced to the fourth round, but was beaten in straight sets byJannik Sinner.[97] In doubles, Kyrgios andThanasi Kokkinakis finished up in the semifinals, again losing to the eventual champions Isner andHubert Hurkacz. Kyrgios then reached the semifinals inHouston, his sole clay court event of the year, losing toReilly Opelka in the semifinals.[98] InStuttgart, his first grass tournament of the year, Kyrgios reached the semi-finals where he lost toAndy Murray. InHalle, Kyrgios beat second seed and world No. 6Stefanos Tsitsipas[99] and sixth seedPablo Carreno Busta[100] on his way to his third tour-level semifinal of 2022, before losing toHubert Hurkacz.[101]

At the2022 Wimbledon Championships, Kyrgios beat wildcardPaul Jubb in 5 sets, but was fined US$10,000 for verbally abusing a line judge and spitting in the direction of a spectator.[102] He then went on to beatFilip Krajinović andTsitsipas (for the second time during the grass season), to reach the fourth round. Following this, Kyrgios beatBrandon Nakashima in 5 sets to reach his first major quarterfinal since the2015 Australian Open. He followed this with a shut out win overCristian Garín and reached his first ever major semifinal.[103] Kyrgios then reached his first major final afterRafael Nadal withdrew from the semifinals,[104] becoming the first player in theOpen Era to get a walkover into the Wimbledon final.[105][106] Kyrgios lost the Wimbledon final toNovak Djokovic in a competitive 4-set match lasting over three hours.[107] It was the first time Kyrgios lost to Djokovic in 3 career meetings, though they had not played each other since 2017.[108]

InAtlanta, Kyrgios withdrew from the singles tournament, but went on to win hissecond doubles title withThanasi Kokkinakis, defeating fellow AustraliansJason Kubler andJohn Peers in straight sets. InWashington, Kyrgios won his first singles title in 3 years and his secondWashington Open singles title –– defeatingMarcos Giron,Tommy Paul,Reilly Opelka,Frances Tiafoe andMikael Ymer en route to the final againstYoshihito Nishioka, where he won in straight sets. In the doubles, Kyrgios partnered withJack Sock, where after receiving a walkover in the semifinals, they defeatedIvan Dodig andAustin Krajicek to win theWashington Open doubles title. As a result, Kyrgios became the first player to win both the singles and doubles titles at Washington in the same year in the tournament's history.[109]

At theCanadian Open, Kyrgios defeated top seedDaniil Medvedev in the second round.[110] Next he defeated his compatriotAlex de Minaur but eventually lost toHubert Hurkacz in the quarterfinals.[111] At theCincinnati Masters, Kyrgios was defeated in the second round byTaylor Fritz in a match only lasting 51 minutes.[112]

At theUS Open, Kyrgios defeatedThanasi Kokkinakis,Benjamin Bonzi and wildcardJJ Wolf to reach the fourth round at the US Open for the first time in his career. He then defeated world No.1Danill Medvedev in four sets to reach the quarterfinals at the event for the first time. With his win over Medvedev, Kyrgios became the first Australian player to beat the world No. 1 twice within the same year, sincePat Cash in 1987.[113] In the quarterfinals, he faced off against Russian 27th seedKaren Khachanov, losing a closely fought match in five sets. Despite the loss, Kyrgios returned to the Top 20 for the first time since February 2020 and reclaimed the No.1 Australian position, overtakingAlex de Minaur.[114]

In October, Kyrgios reached the quarterfinals of theJapan Open, but withdrew before his clash withTaylor Fritz, citing a knee problem as the cause for his exit.[115]

Kyrgios, along with doubles partnerThanasi Kokkinakis qualified for the2022 ATP Finals in Turin after being guaranteed a spot under the Grand Slam champion provision.[116] The pair failed to progress past the round robin stage of the event after recording a 1–2 win-loss record.

Kyrgios ended the2022 season ranked No. 22 in singles and No. 13 in doubles. This was Kyrgios' highest end-of-year doubles ranking of his career.

2023–24: Australian Open withdrawal and injuries

[edit]

Kyrgios was scheduled to participate and represent Australia in the inauguralUnited Cup to begin his season. However, he withdrew on the eve of the event following an ankle injury.[117] Kyrgios subsequently withdrew from theAdelaide International 2 event the following week as a precaution in the lead up to the Australian Open.[118] On 13 January, Kyrgios competed in aFast4 exhibition match againstNovak Djokovic atRod Laver Arena. Kyrgios defeated Djokovic in three-sets in front of a sold-out crowd.[119] Just days later, on the eve of the2023 Australian Open, Kyrgios withdrew from the event due to a knee injury.[120] He revealed a cyst caused by a tear in his lateral meniscus would require arthroscopic surgery, and that was done later the same month.[120][121]

Withdrawing from several events, Kyrgios was expected to return during the French Open, but he had a foot injury during an armed robbery at his home.[122] He next prepared for Wimbledon in June, but during a practice session, he tore a ligament in his wrist.[123] He spent the rest of 2023 out due to injury, and he announced that he would return for the 2024 grass season.[124][125][126][127][128]

In 2024, Kyrgios said that his wrist injury required innovative surgery to reduce the pain and inevitable permanent arthritis, and he instead became a commentator for BBC and ESPN.

The ANAFAB wrist surgery (full wrist reconstruction) that Kyrgios had performed in September 2023 was too serious to be fully ready for competition in 2024, although he did return for a UTS match in September 2024, which he won againstCasper Ruud.[129][130]

2025: Return to the Tour

[edit]

In November 2024, Nick Kyrgios announced his return to the tour,[131][132] first at theWorld Tennis League event in Abu Dhabi in December 2024. This was followed by a headline appearance at theBrisbane International 2025 (where he was the 2018 champion). Kyrgios's first match as a wildcard was a doubles match withNovak Djokovic which they won in three close sets. It was intended to showcase the attraction of doubles as a crowd pleaser alongside the WTA 500 and ATP 250 also being played in Brisbane.[133][134]

Kyrgios's playedGiovanni Mpetshi Perricard in his first round singles match at the Brisbane International. He lost in three tie-breakers, not once dropping his serve. Perricard served 36 aces in the match.[135] Kyrgios's wrist injury needed attention during the match.[136] Djokovic and Kyrgios lost their second round doubles match to the number one seeds, Mektic and Venus in a close match.[137] In an interview after the match Kyrgios was cautious about his upcoming participation in singles at the Australian Open stating that although doing well, his wrist needed more recovery work.[138][139]

For theAustralian Open in 2025[140] he had a protected ranking (PR) of 21.[141] Although 21 is technically a seeded ranking, PR's do not play as seeds as they are returning from injury.[142]

In the singles first round, Kyrgios was drawn againstJacob Fearnley, and was defeated in three sets. Despite Kyrgios calling the trainer to attend to a recent abdominal injury, he was unable to take it to a fourth set. In his subsequent media interview, Kyrgios said that he had 'probably played his last singles match at the Australian Open'.[143]Alicia Molik, Will Boucek and other retired players have urged him to keep playing doubles.[144]

In the doubles first round, Kyrgios played withThanasi Kokkinakis, who he had won the AO doubles with in 2022. Kokkinakis had suffered a serious shoulder injury in his singles match againstJack Draper, but elected to play for the last time before shoulder surgery, alongside Kyrgios. They retired halfway through the match againstAleksandr Vukic andJames Duckworth.[145]

In March 2025, Kyrgios returned toIndian Wells, entering the main draw with a protected ranking of 21. He was drawn against DutchmanBotic Van de Zandschulp. Kyrgios withdrew from a practice session after injuring his wrist but chose to play anyway. Despite a first set which went to a tie-breaker, Kyrgios withdrew due to wrist pain in the second set.[146] In his post-match interview Kyrgios intended to continue trying to get back to a competent level. "I want to play. I want to play. I had glimpses of it tonight, with the crowd going absolutely ballistic, and I’m playing amazing and I’m enjoying being out there. The pain, it’s just not great. I’ll keep looking forward and try and do the right thing."[147]Botic Van de Zandschulp would go on to beat Djokovic in the second round.[148]

InMiami, Kyrgios beatMackie MacDonald, defeating the American in three sets. It was his first win on the tour in 896 days and brought his live ranking back to the mid-600s. He said the win gave him extra motivation moving forward[149] but after such a major wrist reconstruction, attempting to fix the rupturedscapholunate ligament, he was not expecting to ever get back to his best.[150] The second round match against twenty-second seedKaren Khachanov provided a first set ending in a tie-breaker which he lost. Kyrgios was bagelled in the second set, apparently hindered by both wrist and shoulder injuries.[151][152] On X (formerly Twitter) Kyrgios wrote: 'Honestly today was a big stepping stone. Karen Khachanov was just too good. We played a great first set but encouraging that I could finish two matches this week! Plenty to work on. Thank you old friend and good luck for the rest of the tournament.' He indicated that he will continue training to get back to a tour level standard.[153]

National representation

[edit]

ATP Cup

[edit]

Kyrgios played in the inaugural ATP Cup in 2020 in Brisbane and in the Sydney finals. He won three straight singles matches againstJan-Lennard Struff of Germany, Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece andCameron Norrie of Great Britain respectively, as well as a doubles match alongsideAlex de Minaur to defeat Great Britain in the quarter-finals. He eventually lost toRoberto Bautista Agut in the semi-finals against Spain in straight sets.[154]

Davis Cup

[edit]

Nick Kyrgios has represented Australia eleven times at the Davis Cup in both singles and doubles on all surfaces. His win-loss record is 11–6 with most of his wins coming on hard courts.[155]

Kyrgios made hisDavis Cup debut forAustralia inSeptember 2013 againstPoland at the age of 18.[156] He replacedMarinko Matosevic after defeating him in a playoff during the lead-up to the tie. He was selected to pair withChris Guccione in the crucial doubles rubber. They lost toMariusz Fyrstenberg andMarcin Matkowski in five sets. He then went on to win his first singles rubber, afterMichał Przysiężny retired five games into the match.[157][158] Australia won the tie 4–1.

In 2014 Australia was drawn to play a very strongFrance and lost the tie 5–0. Kyrgios lost both his singles matches againstRichard Gasquet andGaël Monfils. Australia was relegated to the World Group Play-offs and were drawn against Uzbekistan in September. Australia beat Uzbekistan 5–0. Kyrgios won both his matches againstDenis Istomin and Sanjar Faiyziez. Australia returned to the World Group.

In 2015 Kyrgios was selected to play in the quarter finals againstKazakhstan. He lost his singles match in 4 close sets, was injured and was then replaced bySam Groth in the reverse singles rubber. Australia won the tie 3–2. He was dropped from theDavis Cup squad due to play their semi-final tie againstGreat Britain.[159] Australia lost 2–3. He returned to the Davis Cup team in September 2016 for Australia's emphatic World Group playoff victory againstSlovakia. Kyrgios won his singles tie in straight sets.

In 2017 Australia was drawn to play theCzech Republic in the first round and won the tie 4–1. Kyrgios won his singles match in straight sets.

Kyrgios led the team to the quarter finals in May where they played in Brisbane against the USA. He beat both John Isner and Sam Querrrey in straight sets including four tie breakers and Australia won the tie 3–2. He led Australia into the semi-finals against Belgium which were played at home in Brussels with a vocal home crowd. He beat Steve Darcis in 5 sets but lost to captainDavid Goffin in four. Australia lost the semi-finals tie 3–2.

In 2018 Australia was drawn to play Germany in the World Group first round. Kyrgios again led the team and beatJan-Lennard Struff in three sets. Needing pain killers to continue the next day, he playedAlexander Zverev but lost his match in straight sets. Australia lost the tie 3–1.

That was the last year in which the Davis Cup was played in the old 'Home and Away' five set, three day setup. The finals went to Spain.

In 2019, Kyrgios was left out of the Davis Cup team for their qualifier in Adelaide, which they won against Bosnia and Herzegovina. He was re-added to the team later in the year for theDavis Cup Finals in Spain.[160] In Spain, he won his singles rubbers against Colombia and Belgium to advance to the quarter-finals against Canada. He then withdrew from the quarter-finals due to a collar bone injury and was replaced byJohn Millman. Australia ended up losing the tie 1–2.[161][162]

Davis Cup was not held during the pandemic and Australia was eliminated in 2021. Kyrgios ended his season early due to a knee injury and was unavailable. During 2022 Kyrgios was not available due to overplaying and ankle injury. Australia reached the finals underAlex de Minaur but lost. Kyrgios was chosen for the 2023United Cup but was unable to play because of an ankle injury. A few weeks later he had major surgery on his knee.

Australia again got to the finals but lost in the 2023 Davis Cup. In November 2024 Team CaptainLleyton Hewitt resumed discussions with Kyrgios about playing in Davis Cup and he hopes to be able to play again after full recovery.[163][164]

Playing style

[edit]
Kyrgios playing at the2015 Wimbledon Championships

Kyrgios has been described as having an unusually aggressive game. While growing up, he was overweight, asthmatic, and has stated he "had to work out a way to be more aggressive than the average player".[165] Former British no. 1John Lloyd described watching Kyrgios as a "pleasure" because of "the mixture and the flair", adding that his character is one which attracts fans.[61]The Guardian has described his playing style as "powerfully flamboyant, sometimes ridiculously-brilliant game, which is something to behold".[166]

In 2017, theATP rated Kyrgios as the fifth best server in the history of professional tennis – with better results than current players such as Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer.[167] He reaches speeds up to 230 km/h (140 mph) and wins 78.8% of his first-serve points.[168] His second serve is also one of the best on the ATP Tour and often hit at above 200 km/h (120 mph). He sometimes tries for aces, on both his first and second serves.[165]Goran Ivanišević has said "[Kyrgios] is a tennis genius. You can't prepare for Nick Kyrgios, he is the best server in the game by far. It's impossible to create tactics [against him]."[169]

Kyrgios' powerful two-handed backhand

He has an effective forehand and (two-handed) backhand and is also able to mix up his shot selection using spin, slices and dropshots. While his game suits grass and hard courts, he reached his first ATP Tour final on clay inEstoril.

Underarm serve

[edit]

Kyrgios first used theunderarm serve at the2019 Mexican Open inAcapulco during his match withRafael Nadal. In a June 2022 press interview, following his first round victory atWimbledon against British playerPaul Jubb, Kyrgios cited his struggles of winning a point against Nadal in the match which led him to alter his serve, stating: “I'm playing Rafael Nadal for like three hours. I couldn't win a point. I threw in one underarm serve. They, I don't know if there's a place in the game for that. Everyone does it now. It's like they're a genius.”[170][171] Nadal subsequently declared it was not within the spirit of the game, and accused Kyrgios of "lacking respect" for his opponent and the crowd.[172]

Kyrgios has been credited for reintroducing the underarm serve into theATP Tour, and he has now used the underarm serve more frequently than any other player in professional tennis.[171][173]

Coaching history

[edit]

Kyrgios has had a number of different coaches and mentors throughout his career. He tends to try one coach and then another, but prefers to do things his own way. In an interview withThe New Yorker in 2017, he said: "Every coach I had tried to tame me, tried to make me play more disciplined, tried to make me do drills. I've just been kind of playing on instinct. I feel like it's been successful, so I don't know why there's a good reason to stop that."[174]

In his junior and early professional career, Kyrgios was coached by former Australian professional tennis player and then-ACT national academy coachTodd Larkham, who was Kyrgios' first coach.[175] Larkham had coached Kyrgios from age 10–17.[175] In 2013 it was reported that he was coached by former Australian professional tennis playerDesmond Tyson,[176] and later New Zealand tennis coachSimon Rea who worked forTennis Australia.[177][178] Under Rea Kyrgios reached aGrand Slam Quarter-final (Wimbledon) for the first time in his career.[179] In 2014 Kyrgios was re-united with former coachTodd Larkham alongside former Australian professional doubles playerJoshua Eagle.[175][180] Kyrgios' cited reasons to change coaches were to spend more time at his home inCanberra. In June 2015 Kyrgios parted withLarkham, less than a week before his appearance atWimbledon.[181][182] Two months later, in the lead-up to theUS Open, Kyrgios brought inLleyton Hewitt for temporary coaching and mentoring.[183]

Kyrgios continued not having a coach for the remainder of 2015 and throughout 2016. In May 2017, almost two years without a coach, Kyrgios hired French former professional tennis playerSébastien Grosjean.[184][185]Grosjean was allegedly hired on a part-time basis, and held the position until the end of the year. Since 2017 Kyrgios has been without a head coach, and in 2020 stated: "And, for me, I don't have a goal of winning grand slams. I just want to do it my way, have fun with it and just play. So to get a coach for me is just pointless. Because I don't want to waste their time almost. I just don't think a coach is ready – and I'm not going to put them through it too cause it would just be a nightmare. Where I'm at my career now, it's just too far gone, I think for a coach, 'cause I'm too set in my ways and I just don't like to listen to advice, to be honest."[186]

Throughout his career Kyrgios has had offers by many former professional players, and coaches, to coach him. Some includeJimmy Connors (2016),[187]Pete Sampras (2016)[188] andJohn McEnroe (2017, 2020).[189][190]

Broadcasting, film, and television

[edit]

Kyrgios made his broadcasting debut as a guest commentator and analyst onTennis Channel for the2023 ATP Finals alongside Andy Roddick and Jim Courier.[191] Kyrgios would later make his ESPN debut two months later when he commentated the2024 Australian Open.[192]

Kyrgios appeared in the documentaryAustralia's Open, which covered the Australian Open's history and impact on tennis andAustralian culture. It premiered at the 2023Melbourne International Film Festival.[193][194]

Kyrgios appeared in the tennis docuseriesBreak Point, which premiered on Netflix on January 13, 2023.[195][196][197] Kyrgios is highlighted by the series in several episodes. In Episode One, Kyrgios andThanasi Kokkinakis feature in their road to their grand slam doubles title.[197] In Episode Six, two Australian players are featured. Kyrgios' struggles with suicidal thoughts and depression are revealed.[198] In Episode Seven, the 2022 Wimbledon finalists are highlighted includingOns Jabeur and Nick Kyrgios.[199] He praises his opponent Novak Djokovic.[200]

On 1 December 2023, Kyrgios was a guest on the British talk showPiers Morgan Uncensored. The segment covered Kyrgios's mental health struggles and support from Andy Murray,[201] conflicts with other Australian athletes,[202] his return to tennis, his experience with racism,[203] and his mother being held at gunpoint.[204][205]

In 2024, Kyrgios launched a celebrity-interview series namedGood Trouble with Nick Kyrgios,[206] sponsored byNaomi Osaka's company Hana Kuma. It consisted of 12 episodes, with guests includingMike Tyson,Jemele Hill,Frances Tiafoe andNovak Djokovic.[207]

In 2024, Kyrgios became a commentator and analyst for the BBC atWimbledon.[208] His Wimbledon commentating debut was well-received by broadcasters and other pundits.[209] He called the Gentleman's final betweenCarlos Alcaraz andNovak Djokovic alongside commentatorsAndrew Castle andTim Henman, and also provided pre-match on-court previews and post-match analysis with head of commentary,Claire Balding, and Tim Henman.[210][211]

At the 2024 US Open, Nick Kyrgios worked as a reporter and co-commentator forESPN. He called matches alongsideChris Fowler,Rennae Stubbs,Chris McKendry, John andPatrick McEnroe including the men's and women's final.[212] Kyrgios conducted pre-match interviews during the tournament, speaking with players before they walked onto the court.

When the 2025 Wimbledon commentary team was announced Nick Kyrgios was not included. However, he continued his celebrity interview series Good Trouble with Nick Kyrgios live at the New Wimbledon Theatre[213][214] and also joined thetalkSPORT daily podcast withSimon Jordan throughout Wimbledon 2025 to discuss broad current issues in tennis. He hosted Wimbledon Unfiltered on talkSPORT which has 1.68 million subscribers,[215][216] and called both the men's and women's finals on the new 'Watchalong Wimbledon' format for TNT Sports alongside Dan Evans And Coco VandeWeghe.

Reputation

[edit]
This section has multiple issues. Please helpimprove it or discuss these issues on thetalk page.(Learn how and when to remove these messages)
This sectionmay contain an excessive amount of intricatedetail that may only interest a particular audience. Please help byspinning off orrelocating any relevant information, and removing excessive detail that may be againstWikipedia's inclusion policy.(December 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
This section'stone or style may not reflect theencyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia. See Wikipedia'sguide to writing better articles for suggestions.(December 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
(Learn how and when to remove this message)

Early career

[edit]

Kyrgios won his first challenger tour title at the age of 17.[31] He was often described as someone with great dedication to the game, with those around him, such as his childhood coach, Andrew Bulley, saying he was a 'super competitor' who 'trained with a better intensity than the other kids',[217] and his father, describing him as a 'perfectionist'.[218] After defeating the 18 year old Kyrgios in the 2014 Davis Cup World Cup tie, top French playerRichard Gasquet said, "He's got a great attitude and a wonderful personality. I think he will be a prominent player in the future".[20]

Andrew Bulley believes the support of Kyrgios' close-knit family was a critical factor in his attitude and motivation at the time.[219] He was close to his family and friends, but as he rose through the rankings, playing in tournaments all over the world meant that he was away from home for long periods. He said: "I was winning, losing, going through relationship problems, dealing with other problems and I was pushing (family) away because you feel like the world's against you. I'm going seven months a year abroad in a new place every week. That's why tennis is so hard in my opinion."[220] According to his mother, Nill Kyrgios, this was a very hard time for her son as a result of the criticism and pressure he was under.[citation needed]

Current public perception

[edit]

Kyrgios continues to be a polarising figure with the public and one who is highly criticised in the media. Since his return in December 2024 after experimental wrist surgery, the media are re-assessing his future based on a good performance at the Brisbane International.[138][139] He is frequently invited to play exhibition and team tennis events such asUltimate Tennis Showdown andWorld Tennis League despite having lower rankings than other players.[221] He remains one of the most popular drawcards at live tennis events, with his matches filling the stadiums at the recent Brisbane International.[10] His final matches on John Cain Arena in Melbourne were also sold out despite fans knowing that his injures would not allow him to provide the entertainment they expect from his matches.[222]

Kyrgios produced some of the best performances of his career atWimbledon in 2022. After losing to Djokovic in the final, Kyrgios said: "It's taken me 10 years – almost 10 years – in my career to finally get to the point of playing for a grand slam and coming up short, but my level is right there."[223] When asked if this had made him hungry for more grand slam finals, he replied "no, it was exhausting!", provoking laughter among the crowd.[citation needed]

Opinions held by other tennis professionals

[edit]

Players, coaches and commentators

[edit]

John Newcombe, former Australian world No. 1 in both singles and doubles, remarked that: "Nick is an exceptional talent and he doesn't beat to the same drum as everyone else – he's a real individual."[61]

Tim Henman, former British No.1 (1996, 1999–2005) stated that: "Kyrgios is a performer, an entertainer and will go out and play the tennis he is capable of. He can beat anyone because he is seriously talented. He is a bit different and speaks his mind."[61]

Paul Annacone, Roger Federer's former coach, has been quoted as saying: "I think Nick is the most talented player since Roger jumped on the scene".[224]

Novak Djokovic after beating Kyrgios in the2022 Wimbledon final: "I really respect you a lot. I think you are a phenomenal tennis player and athlete, an amazing talent."[225]

Coco Gauff, during a press-conference at Flushing Meadows, praised Kyrgios for practicing with her at the Miami Open despite already having concluded a two-hour long practice withFrances Tiafoe, noting that:[226]

"I know there's things on the court that he does that people don't agree with. I probably don't agree with some things," Gauff said. "But it's just things like [hitting with a young kid] that stands out for me."

"It's just moments like that that people don't really see about him. So I think people paint him as a bad guy. I feel around the grounds, at least my experience of him, he's not."

"If he keeps it up, I think he can go far ... I always, always root for him, no matter who he's playing, to be honest."

Lee McKenzie, who conducts immediate post-match interviews with winning players in front of the crowd on Centre Court at Wimbledon, was quoted as saying: "He is fascinating. I did a lot of interviews with him at Wimbledon last year (in 2022). I was the first person on court. I stood back and actually Nick noticed this and he looked over from his chair and just sort of gave me a little nod and waved me on. That was perfect and I went on and we did a great interview. I just think he respected the fact that I had given him space and we just did this lovely interview.”[227][228]

John McEnroe

[edit]

John McEnroe has also praised Kyrgios's talent. In late 2018 on theSeven Network'sSunday Night show in Australia, McEnroe said that Kyrgios is "the most talented player [he's] seen in the last ten years" but that Kyrgios may "run himself out", if he continued not to commit himself to tennis.[229][230] While hosting a radio call-in show during the2021 Wimbledon Championships onBBC Radio 5 Live McEnroe stated that if he could choose any player on the current tour to coach he would pick Kyrgios.[231]

Off the court

[edit]

Persona outside professional tennis

[edit]

Those who know Kyrgios personally say his off-court personality is very different from his on-court antics. Hugh van Cuylenburg, founder of the Resilience Project says:[232]

"Everyone who has ever met him say he's a sensational person who cares deeply about other people. He doesn't seek recognition or publicity for the good things he does."

On a similar note, fellow Australian,Jason Kubler, said:[233]

"Every time I see him, he's smiling. Every time I'm around him, it seems like I'm laughing. 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."

Response to Australian bushfires

[edit]

Kyrgios pledged to donate $200 for every ace he served during the summer, which was subsequently taken up by other Australian tennis players.[234] Kyrgios also askedTennis Australia to hold an exhibition match before the2020 Australian Open to raise more funds.[235] Numerous top tennis players participated includingCaroline Wozniacki,Serena Williams,Coco Gauff,Alexander Zverev,Stefanos Tsitsipas,Naomi Osaka,Dominic Thiem,Petra Kvitova,Novak Djokovic,Rafael Nadal andRoger Federer. This brought the Aces for Bushfire Relief total to almost $5 million.[236]

Criticism and support for Djokovic

[edit]

In June 2020, Kyrgios publicly criticised Djokovic for organizing the controversial charity tennis tournament at which Djokovic and numerous other tennis players tested positive forCOVID-19, calling it a "boneheaded decision".[237]

In January 2021, Kyrgios called Djokovic a "tool" after he issued a wish-list of requirements for players forced to quarantine when they arrive in the country to play in the Australian Open.[238] A year later, when Djokovic was detained by the Australian government after entering the country unvaccinated, Kyrgios was the first and most notable player to speak up for his predicament, declaring: "He's a human, I just don't think how we're going about it is the right way and that's coming from someone who we've had run in and comments about each other, but it's not right." He also praised Djokovic for his generous response to the bush fire disasters.[239][240]

In June 2022, after Djokovic beat Kyrgios in the Wimbledon final, Kyrgios called Djokovic "a bit of a god" after which Djokovic jokingly declared his relationship with Nick Kyrgios "officially a bromance".[225]

Controversial incidents

[edit]

Kyrgios has been involved in a number of controversial incidents during tennis matches, mostly during his early career.

During a match at the2015 Rogers Cup, Kyrgios generated considerable controversy for insults he directed atStan Wawrinka in the middle of the match. During play, Kyrgios' voice was picked up by the on-court microphone telling Wawrinka, "Kokkinakis banged your girlfriend; sorry to tell you that, mate," a lewd reference to fellow proThanasi Kokkinakis and Wawrinka's girlfriend at the time,WTA playerDonna Vekic.[241] After the match, Wawrinka said he found the comments "unacceptable" and urged action be taken against Kyrgios.[242]

Kyrgios was fined $13,127 and given suspended penalties pending further breaches by the ATP. He later apologised to Wawrinka.[243]

At the2019 Rome Masters, Kyrgios was defaulted from his second round encounter withCasper Ruud after swearing at a line judge, kicking a bottle, and hurling a chair onto court. The default followed the three warnings rule which Kyrgios accepted immediately and shook hands with the referee, supervisor and opponent. The referee and supervisor had tried many times to quell a heckling group without success.[244][245] The 2023 clay season was extremely rowdy and measures trialled at Roland Garros 2023 are being put in place to protect players from physical and social media abuse.[246][247][248]

Mental health issues

[edit]

At age 19, ranked 144th in the world, he received a wildcard entry to play at Wimbledon and beat then-world No. 1 Nadal in the fourth round. Beating Nadal, the first time he played against him, brought international attention. From then on he was told: "you're the next big thing in tennis." Kyrgios admits he didn't know how to deal with the pressure. He told theTurn Up the Talk podcast in May 2022: "I kept trying, trying and trying, just ended up snowballing into this dark cloud."

Things became so difficult for him that Kyrgios posted on Instagram that in 2018 he suffered from depression and engaged in self-harm and had suicidal ideation.[249] In an interview on theTurn Up The Talk podcast, he explained that in 2019, even when he was winning tournaments: "[I was] probably drinking 20 to 30 drinks every night – you know, just in my room on my own – waking up [and] playing." Kyrgios said that "winning tournaments seemed to 'just mask all of it', which was the 'darkest thing ever'."[250][251] Struggling to cope, he sought professional help and saw three or four different psychologists.[252]

Endorsements

[edit]
Kyrgios (wearing Nike and Beats apparel) at the2015 Aegon Championships

Kyrgios has endorsement deals with several companies, includingYonex,Nike andBeats.[253]

Personal life

[edit]

Kyrgios is an avid fan of theBoston Celtics in the American league, theNational Basketball Association (NBA),[254] and a life-long supporter ofTottenham Hotspur in English football'sPremier League.[255] Kyrgios also supports theCanberra Raiders in theNational Rugby League (NRL),North Melbourne in theAustralian Football League (AFL),[256] and in January 2023 joined the ownership group ofSouth East Melbourne Phoenix of the Australian basketball competition, theNBL.

Kyrgios is a co-owner of sports team Miami Pickleball Club.[257]

He is close friends withThanasi Kokkinakis, who he has known since childhood and with whom he went on to win the2022 Australian Open doubles. The pair also made decent runs in Miami, the US Open and2022 ATP Finals.

Kyrgios has followed avegetarian diet since at least early 2020. He said that seeing the loss of animal life during theintense bushfires across Australia reinforced his choice of diet.[258]

Kyrgios has spoken about his battle withmental health, includingdepression andself-harm. During an episode of Netflix series Break Point and subsequent interviews this was revealed in detail. Although it is difficult for high profile athletes to admit to such issues, experts believe it helps young males especially to seek help.[259]

Relationships

[edit]

In December 2021, Kyrgios started dating Psychological Sciences graduate Costeen Hatzi[260][261] who owns and runs several businesses in interior and dress design.[262] They separated in late March 2025 after nearly four years of a mutually supportive relationship with Kyrgios now intending to pursue his tennis career more intensively as his wrist and knee surgeries continue to heal.[263]

Common assault case

[edit]

In July 2020, Kyrgios entered into a relationship with Chiara Passari. They separated in October 2021.

In 2022, it was announced that Kyrgios was summoned to appear in court, in Australia, to face a charge of common assault, for allegedly grabbing Passari in January 2021.

In 2023, Kyrgios pleaded guilty to the assault charge but was not convicted, as Magistrate Beth Campbell stated that he had "acted poorly in the heat of the moment", and that the case was "at the lower end of the scale of common assault".[264]

Career statistics

[edit]
Main article:Nick Kyrgios career statistics

Grand Slam tournament performance timelines

[edit]
Key
W F SFQF#RRRQ#DNQANH
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W–L) win–loss record.
To avoid confusion and double counting, these charts are updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player's participation has ended.

Singles

[edit]

Current through the2025 Australian Open.

Tournament20122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242025SRW–LWin %
Australian OpenQ1Q12RQF3R2R4R1R4R3R2RAA1R0 / 1017–1063%
French OpenA2R1R3R[A]3R2RAAAAAAAA0 / 55–550%
WimbledonAAQF4R4R1R3R2RNH3RF[A]AAA0 / 820–871%
US OpenA1R3R1R3R1R3R3RA1RQFAAA0 / 912–957%
Win–loss0–01–27–48–49–42–47–33–33–14–310–30–00–00–10 / 3254–3263%
  1. ^abKyrgios received walkovers in the second-round match of the2015 French Open and in the2022 Wimbledon semifinals, which do not count as a win.

Doubles

[edit]
Tournament20122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242025SRW–LWin %
Australian OpenA1RA1R1RA2R[A]1RA2RWAA1R1 / 88–657%
French OpenAAA1R1R3RAAAAAAAA0 / 32–340%
WimbledonAAAAAAAANHAAAAA0 / 00–0
US OpenAA1RA3R[A]2RA2R[A]AA3RAAA0 / 56–367%
Win–loss0–00–10–10–22–23–21–01–10–01–18–10–00–00–11 / 1616–1257%
  1. ^abcOne withdrawal at the Australian Open (2018) and two at the US Open (2016,2019), which do not count as losses.

Grand Slam tournament finals

[edit]

Singles: 1 (1 runner-up)

[edit]
ResultYearTournamentSurfaceOpponentScore
Loss2022WimbledonGrassSerbiaNovak Djokovic6–4, 3–6, 4–6, 6–7(3–7)

Doubles: 1 (1 title)

[edit]
ResultYearTournamentSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
Win2022Australian OpenHardAustraliaThanasi KokkinakisAustraliaMatthew Ebden
AustraliaMax Purcell
7–5, 6–4

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abCraze, Kirsten (20 January 2020)."Australian Open 2020: Where the world's biggest tennis stars live".realestate.com.au.REA Group.
  2. ^Chancellor, Jonathan (9 May 2022)."Nick Kyrgios scores super cool Sydney penthouse".realestate.com.au. REA Group. Retrieved28 June 2022.
  3. ^Moran, Jonathan (9 May 2022)."Nick Kyrgios finds his love match with Costeen Hatzi: 'she is definitely the one'".The Daily Telegraph. Sydney. Retrieved28 June 2022.
  4. ^"ATP Prize Money Leaders"(PDF).Archived(PDF) from the original on 30 December 2024. Retrieved12 July 2021.
  5. ^abc"Nick Kyrgios – Rankings History".ATP Tour. Retrieved10 February 2021.
  6. ^"Nick Kyrgios knocks out Rafael Nadal".BBC. 2 July 2014. Retrieved5 January 2018.
  7. ^"2017 ATP World Tour Media Guide"(PDF).atptour.com.ATP Tour. p. 96.
  8. ^"Tennis Abstract: Dominik Hrbaty ATP Match Results, Splits, and Analysis".Tennisabstract.com. Retrieved19 September 2018.
  9. ^"Kyrgios completes the Big 3 challenge on first try".
  10. ^abMichaels, Jake (30 December 2024)."The Greatest Showman: Nick Kyrgios reminds all he is everything tennis desperately needs".ESPN.
  11. ^Futterman, Matthew (15 January 2023)."Nick Kyrgios Is Coming for Tennis".The New York Times.His father, a house painter from Greece, would hit a bucket of balls with him after work.
  12. ^abHarvey, Adam (2 July 2014)."Australian tennis hopeful Nick Kyrgios might be 'the one' but first he needs to play Rafael Nadal". ABC. Retrieved2 July 2014.
  13. ^Langmaid, Aaron (6 January 2022)."Nick Kyrgios' parents saw his rise coming after years of doing it tough". Fox Sports Australia. Retrieved10 March 2022.
  14. ^abTam, Michelle (6 July 2014)."Tennis pro very close to relatives in Shah Alam, says mum".The Star.
  15. ^Schlink, Leo (1 July 2014)."Rod Laver says Nick Kyrgios can put pressure on Rafael Nadal at Wimbledon tonight". News Corp Australia. Retrieved2 July 2014.Kyrgios' manager John Morris: "Then you've got the mass audience he can potentially reach in Malaysia with his Mum (Norlaila) being Malay and the entire Asian community."
  16. ^Magnay, Jacquelin (27 June 2014)."Nick Kyrgios now feels the Grand Slam pressure".The Australian. Retrieved2 July 2014.
  17. ^ab"Nick Kyrgios | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved10 February 2021.
  18. ^Dutton, Chris (19 September 2014)."Nick Kyrgios and royal mum, Nill, can claim tennis crown at Malaysian Open".The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved20 September 2014.
  19. ^"Χαμόγελα στους Γεωργάνους για τη νίκη του Κύργιου".Epirus Post (in Greek). 2 July 2014. Retrieved21 January 2025.
  20. ^ab"Nick Kyrgios, Daramalan Student".Missionaries of the Sacred Heart Australia. 11 February 2014. Archived fromthe original on 4 August 2020. Retrieved27 September 2018.
  21. ^Pearce, Linda (25 January 2013)."Newly crowned No.1 reaps reward of choosing right court".The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved25 January 2013.
  22. ^Gaskin, Lee; Dutton, Chris (3 July 2014)."New $27 million ACT sports centre to provide perfect home for Nick Kyrgios".The Canberra Times.
  23. ^Dutton, Chris (19 December 2014)."Nick Kyrgios ready to take next step in career and prove beating Rafael Nadal wasn't a one-hit wonder".
  24. ^Dutton, Chris (24 January 2015)."Nick Kyrgios to honour his Nanna's memory in Canberra".The Sydney Morning Herald.
  25. ^"Nick Kyrgios Shares Kiss with New Love Interest Ajla Tomljanovic in front of Australian Open Cameras".Herald Sun. 26 January 2016. Retrieved8 March 2016.
  26. ^"Fanning, Kyrgios win". Fiji Sun. Retrieved11 March 2013.
  27. ^Dutton, Chris (14 December 2012)."Kyrgios has sights on Open season".The Canberra Times. Retrieved11 March 2013.
  28. ^"Nick Kyrgios is the favourite for the boys' championship".The Australian. 21 January 2013. Retrieved21 January 2013.
  29. ^"Nick Kyrgios wins Australian Open boys' singles title".Herald Sun. 26 January 2013. Retrieved26 January 2013.
  30. ^"Nick Kyrgios ready to jump into big time".The Australian. 28 January 2013. Retrieved21 January 2014.
  31. ^ab"Kyrgios proves he's up to the Challenger".The Canberra Times. 4 March 2013. Retrieved24 January 2014.
  32. ^"Injury cruels Millman's French bid".Tennis Australia. Retrieved24 January 2014.
  33. ^"Australian Nick Kyrgios upsets Radek Stepanek in opening round".ABC News. 27 May 2013. Retrieved24 January 2014.
  34. ^"Kyrgios puts up brave fight against fourth seed".The Canberra Times. 27 August 2013. Retrieved24 January 2014.
  35. ^"Kyrgios and Nishikori to start 2014 in Brisbane". Brisbane International. 8 November 2013. Retrieved19 January 2014.
  36. ^"Nick Kyrgios shouldered aside from Brisbane International debut in setback for young gun". News.com.au. 30 December 2013. Archived fromthe original on 20 October 2014. Retrieved19 January 2014.
  37. ^"Eight Australians handed final wildcard entries into Australian Open main draw". ABC News. 7 January 2014. Retrieved19 January 2014.
  38. ^"Nick Kyrgios bucks trend as Matosevic, Duckworth bow out".The Australian. 14 January 2014. Retrieved19 January 2014.
  39. ^Gleeson, Michael (17 January 2014)."Rising star Nick Kyrgios falls short in epic five-set battle".The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved17 January 2014.
  40. ^"Marinko Matosevic and Nick Kyrgios lose first round at the US National Indoor Championships in Memphis". ABC News. 11 February 2014. Retrieved20 April 2014.
  41. ^"Kyrgios withdraws from Delray Beach and Acapulco". ACELAND Tennis. Archived fromthe original on 21 April 2014. Retrieved20 April 2014.
  42. ^Polkinghorne, David (21 April 2014)."Canberra tennis ace Nick Kyrgios wins Sarasota Open in injury comeback".Port Stephens Examiner. Retrieved21 April 2014.
  43. ^"Nick Kyrgios hits 'shot of the year' v Nadal – Wimbledon 2014". The All England Lawn Tennis Club. July 2014.Archived from the original on 17 November 2021. Retrieved2 July 2014.
  44. ^Polkinghorne, David (2 July 2014)."Kyrgios' family celebrates win as cheeky shot goes viral".The Canberra Times. Retrieved4 July 2014.
  45. ^Mitchell, Kevin; Lewis, Tim (1 July 2014)."Nick Kyrgios beats Rafa Nadal and says 'It still hasn't hit me what I've done'".The Guardian. Retrieved2 July 2014.
  46. ^"ATP Rankings". ATP World Tour. 7 July 2014. Retrieved8 July 2014.
  47. ^"Andy Murray to face Nick Kyrgios in Rogers Cup in Toronto". 5 August 2014. Archived fromthe original on 11 August 2014. Retrieved7 August 2014.
  48. ^"Andy Murray enjoys straight-sets win over Nick Kyrgios in the Rogers Cup".The Guardian. 6 August 2014. Retrieved7 August 2014.
  49. ^McGowan, Marc (25 January 2015)."Kyrgios: Australian Open last-eight run tops Wimbledon". acelandtennis.com.au. Archived fromthe original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved26 January 2015.
  50. ^"Djokovic joins Kyrgios fan club ahead of Murray clash". Special Broadcasting Service. 27 January 2015. Retrieved27 January 2015.
  51. ^Dutton, Chris (30 January 2015)."Sponsors line up to get a slice of Nick Kyrgios".The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved2 February 2015.
  52. ^Polkinghorne, David (1 February 2015)."Nick Kyrgios desperate to play Davis Cup after back injury rules him out of Marseille and Dubai".The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved2 February 2015.
  53. ^"Nick Kyrgios stuns top seed Roger Federer at Madrid Masters to move to third round". ABC Grandstand Sport (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). 7 May 2015. Retrieved7 May 2015.
  54. ^"Nick Kyrgios's Madrid Masters run ends as John Isner claims three-set win". ABC News. 7 May 2015. Retrieved11 May 2015.
  55. ^Walton, Darren (26 May 2015)."French Open: Six Australians into second round".The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved26 May 2015.
  56. ^"French Open: Samantha Stosur last remaining Australian woman, Nick Kyrgios gets walkover into third round". ABC Grandstand Sport (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). 28 May 2015. Retrieved28 May 2015.
  57. ^Newbury, Piers (30 May 2015)."Andy Murray beats Nick Kyrgios at French Open to progress".BBC Sport. Retrieved30 May 2015.
  58. ^"Bhupathi-Kyrgios crash out of French Open".First Post. 27 May 2015. Retrieved1 June 2015.
  59. ^"Nick Kyrgios shines on Wimbledon return to blast past Diego Schwartzman".The Guardian. 29 June 2015. Retrieved3 July 2015.
  60. ^Bull, Andy (1 July 2015)."Nick Kyrgios shows his good, bad and ugly side in win over Juan Mónaco".The Guardian. Retrieved3 July 2015.
  61. ^abcdNewbury, Piers (3 July 2015)."Wimbledon 2015: Nick Kyrgios beats Milos Raonic in round three".BBC Sport. Retrieved3 July 2015.
  62. ^Tignor, Steve (25 November 2019)."Men's Match of the Decade No. 10: Federer d. Kyrgios, 2017 Miami".Tennis.com.
  63. ^"Kyrgios adds firepower to Team World | News".Laver Cup. 26 August 2017. Retrieved6 September 2022.
  64. ^ab"Laver Cup 2017: Europe v The World".BBC Sport. Retrieved6 September 2022.
  65. ^ab"Team Europe win inaugural Laver Cup".BBC Sport. Retrieved6 September 2022.
  66. ^AP (7 January 2018)."Nick Kyrgios beats Ryan Harrison to win Brisbane International Title".USA Today Sports eu.usatoday.com.
  67. ^"Dimitrov Halts Kyrgios Comeback To Reach Quarter-Finals".Atpworldtour.com. Retrieved21 January 2018.
  68. ^"Dimitrov withstands Kyrgios barrage". 21 January 2018. Retrieved21 January 2018.
  69. ^"Alexander Zverev battles past Nick Kyrgios in Miami".The Independent.Archived from the original on 20 June 2022. Retrieved23 June 2018.
  70. ^"Kyrgios' sacrifice set to pay off".News.com.au. Retrieved23 June 2018.
  71. ^"Roger Federer back at number one after edging out Nick Kyrgios in thriller".Sporting News. 16 June 2018. Archived fromthe original on 28 November 2020. Retrieved23 June 2018.
  72. ^Park, Simon Cambers at Melbourne (15 January 2019)."Nick Kyrgios outplayed by Milos Raonic in straight-sets defeat".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved4 April 2019.
  73. ^"Nick Kyrgios tops stellar week with Zverev win".The Guardian. Retrieved3 March 2019.
  74. ^"Kyrgios thrown out of Italian Open after on-court outburst",Eurosport, 16 May 2019
  75. ^"Breaking down the drama of Nadal-Kyrgios at Wimbledon". 4 July 2019.
  76. ^"Nick Kyrgios beats Daniil Medvedev for Citi Open title in Washington, D.C. | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  77. ^"'Call of Duty has ruined me': Nick Kyrgios knocked out of US Open by Russian Rublev". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 1 September 2019. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  78. ^"2019 Results & Leaderboard | Scores & Results".Laver Cup. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  79. ^"ATP Concludes Kyrgios Investigation"(PDF).ATP Tour (Press release). 26 September 2019. Retrieved21 September 2024.
  80. ^"Nick Kyrgios given suspended 16-week ban for 'aggravated behaviour'".The Guardian.Reuters. 26 September 2019.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved4 October 2019.
  81. ^"Nick Kyrgios [AUS] | Australian Open".ausopen.com. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  82. ^"Left wrist ends Kyrgios' Acapulco defense; Nick cites crowd disrespect".Tennis.com. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  83. ^"Kyrgios withdraws from US Open".BBC Sport. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  84. ^Goodwin, Sam (29 April 2021)."'Super excited': Nick Kyrgios announces comeback after tennis hiatus". Yahoo! Sport. Retrieved12 February 2022.
  85. ^"'I can't serve' – Nick Kyrgios Wimbledon plans in doubt as he pulls out of Mallorca". 6 June 2021. Retrieved28 June 2022 – via Tennisbuzz.
  86. ^Mesic, Dzevad (7 June 2021)."Nick Kyrgios announces withdrawal from Stuttgart".Tennisworldusa.org. Retrieved28 June 2022.
  87. ^Johnson, Paul (3 July 2021)."Nick Kyrgios retires from third-round Wimbledon match with an abdominal injury". ABC News. Retrieved4 July 2021.
  88. ^"Nick Kyrgios Ends 2021 Season".ATP Tour.
  89. ^Walsh, Courtney (4 January 2022)."Heat is on Nick Kyrgios's critical summer as Australian Open looms".The Guardian.
  90. ^Phillips, Sam (4 January 2022)."Kyrgios cleared of COVID but asthma forces late withdrawal from event".The Sydney Morning Herald.
  91. ^"'I tested positive': Nick Kyrgios in doubt for Australian Open after contracting COVID-19". ABC News. 10 January 2022.
  92. ^Pentony, Luke (19 January 2022)."Nick Kyrgios's beaten opponent Liam Broady shocked by Australian Open crowd behaviour". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved19 January 2022.
  93. ^"Thanasi Kokkinakis & Nick Kyrgios Complete Dream Run, Win Australian Open | Tennis".ATP Tour. 29 January 2022. Retrieved12 February 2022.
  94. ^"Nick Kyrgios On Australian Open Title: 'This One Ranks 1 For Me' | Tennis".ATP Tour. 29 January 2022. Retrieved12 February 2022.
  95. ^"Ranking movers: Multiple Aussies set new career-highs after Australian Open".Tennis Australia. Retrieved6 September 2022.
  96. ^"Nadal beats Kyrgios in thriller at Indian Wells, electric Alcaraz ousts Norrie".Reuters. 18 March 2022. Retrieved9 April 2022.
  97. ^"Kyrgios abuses umpire, poses for selfie and is docked a game in Miami Open defeat".The Guardian. 29 March 2022. Retrieved9 April 2022.
  98. ^"Nick Kyrgios loses to Reilly Opelka at US Clay Court Championships in Houston, after latest outburst aimed at umpires". ABC News. 10 April 2022. Retrieved11 April 2022.
  99. ^"Nick Kyrgios Trumps Stefanos Tsitsipas in Halle Thriller | Tennis".ATP Tour.
  100. ^"Nick Kyrgios Cruises Past Pablo Carreno Busta in Halle | Tennis".ATP Tour.
  101. ^"Hubert Hurkacz reacts to outlasting Nick Kyrgios in Halle thriller". 19 June 2022.
  102. ^Mayne, Joshua (29 June 2022)."Nick Kyrgios spits at fans and calls line judge a 'snitch' in five-set Wimbledon victory".SportingNews.
  103. ^"Rafael Nadal, Nick Kyrgios reach men's singles semifinals at Wimbledon". ESPN. 7 June 2022.
  104. ^"Rafael Nadal withdraws from Wimbledon with injury".nbcsports.com. 7 July 2022.
  105. ^@BBCSport (7 July 2022)."Rafael Nadal has withdrawn from #Wimbledon with an abdominal injury. It means Nick Kyrgios becomes the first player in the open era to get a walk-over into the Wimbledon final" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  106. ^@WWOS (7 July 2022)."Another record to add to the books" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  107. ^"Djokovic tops Kyrgios to win 7th Wimbledon title". ESPN. 10 July 2022. Retrieved10 July 2022.
  108. ^"Nick Kyrgios VS Novak Djokovic | Head 2 Head | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved27 January 2024.
  109. ^"Nick Kyrgios makes history at Citi Open with singles and doubles triumphs". Sky Sports. Retrieved24 September 2025.
  110. ^"Nick Kyrgios Takes Out Daniil Medvedev In Montreal | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved13 August 2022.
  111. ^"Hubert Hurkacz Snaps Nick Kyrgios' Winning Streak In Montreal | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved13 August 2022.
  112. ^"Taylor Fritz Flies Past Nick Kyrgios In Cincinnati | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved18 August 2022.
  113. ^"Nick Kyrgios makes tennis history in staggering 35-year first". 5 September 2022.
  114. ^"Ranking movers: Tomljanovic, Kyrgios rise after career-best US Open runs".Tennis Australia. Retrieved20 January 2023.
  115. ^"'Heartbreaking': Kyrgios withdraws from Japan Open minutes before clash".The Sydney Morning Herald. 7 October 2022. Retrieved20 January 2023.
  116. ^"Thanasi Kokkinakis & Nick Kyrgios Qualify For Nitto ATP Finals | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved20 January 2023.
  117. ^Chammas, Michael (28 December 2022)."He wanted to play: United Cup boss defends Kyrgios after withdrawal".The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved20 January 2023.
  118. ^"Nick Kyrgios pulls out of Adelaide event but in 'no doubt' for Australian Open".The Guardian. Australian Associated Press. 4 January 2023. Retrieved20 January 2023.
  119. ^"Nick Kyrgios trumps Novak Djokovic in entertaining exhibition clash".sportingnews.com. 13 January 2023. Retrieved20 January 2023.
  120. ^ab"'That's life': Kyrgios shattered but philosophical after withdrawing from Australian Open".ABC News. 16 January 2023. Retrieved20 January 2023.
  121. ^"Nick Kyrgios withdraws from Australian Open – Tennis".OlympicTalk | NBC Sports. 16 January 2023. Retrieved20 January 2023.
  122. ^"Nick Kyrgios to miss French Open due to injury sustained during alleged armed robbery".The Guardian. 18 May 2023. p. 1.
  123. ^Australian Associated Press staff (2 July 2023)."Nick Kyrgios out of Wimbledon after reporting wrist injury".The Guardian Australia. p. 1.
  124. ^AAP Staff (16 November 2023)."Nick Kyrgios says 'stars will have to align' for comeback".ESPN tennis. p. 1.
  125. ^Mayne, Joshua (2 November 2023)."Will Nick Kyrgios play at the Australian Open? Updates ahead of 2024 tennis tournament".sporting news.com. p. 1.
  126. ^Mesic, Dzevad (26 October 2023)."Mark Phillippousis fires warning to Nick Kyrgios after Australian's knee injury".Tennis World USA. p. 1.
  127. ^Goodwin, Sam (10 December 2023)."Nick Kyrgios in sad tennis retirement twist after withdrawal from Australian Open".Yahoo Sports.
  128. ^Briggs, Simon (12 December 2023)."Nick Kyrgios: I'm exhausted and tired. If it was up to me I'd retire right now".The Telegraph.
  129. ^Byfield, Chris (21 October 2024)."Nick Kyrgios confirms he will be playing at the Australian Open: wants to win a Grand Slam after 'brutal' injury layoff".Eurosport.
  130. ^Johns, Matthew (21 October 2024)."Nick Kyrgios: I will be playing the Australian Open".Tennis Head.
  131. ^AAP (15 November 2024)."Nick Kyrgios Overcomes Injury Woes to Return to Court for Australian Open Tilt".The Guardian.
  132. ^AAP (15 November 2024)."Nick Kyrgios announces tennis return at Brisbane International ahead of Australian Open".ABC online.
  133. ^Smale, Simon (30 December 2024)."The Djokovic Kyrgios debut was a delight at the Brisbane International".ABC News.
  134. ^ESPN News Services (30 December 2024)."Novak Djokovic, Nick Kyrgios, win in doubles debut in Brisbane".ESPN.
  135. ^Jurejko, Jonathon (31 December 2024)."Kyrgios in 'throbbing pain' after singles comeback".BBC Sport.
  136. ^ATP Tour News (31 December 2024)."Kyrgios 'hit by a bus' in Brisbane, eager to push forward".ATP Tour news report, Brisbane International.
  137. ^AAP sources (1 January 2025)."Kyrgios allays injury fears in tight doubles loss".ESPN India (AAP).
  138. ^abMyles, Stephanie (31 December 2024)."Nick Kyrgios is back, but it's complicated".Open Court Canada.
  139. ^abMcGowan, Mark (1 January 2025)."Back for a good time but not a long time? Enjoy the rest of Kyrgios's career while it lasts".The Age.
  140. ^"Nick Kyrgios: Austrralian wants Grand Slam title to 'shut up' doubters".bbc.co.uk. 14 October 2024.
  141. ^Sembhi, Aisha (6 December 2024)."Nick Kyrgios: What is a protected ranking in sport?".bbc.com.
  142. ^Australian Associated Press News (6 December 2024)."Nick Kyrgios will be in Australian Open Draw with Number 21 Ranking".Guardian Australia.
  143. ^Snape, Jack (13 January 2025)."Nick Kyrgios fears he may have played his last match at the Australian Open".The Guardian.
  144. ^ABC writers (14 January 2025)."His singles career might be over but could Nick Kyrgios become the best doubles player in the world?".abc.net.au.
  145. ^Vinall, Marnie (16 January 2025)."Kyrgios and Kokkinakis mull future after injury-plagued Australian Open".abc.net.au.
  146. ^ATP Tour News (7 March 2025)."Kyrgios retires in Indian Wells return".atptour.com.
  147. ^Fraser, Stuart (7 March 2025)."Nick Kyrgios in tears as he retires hurt at Indian Wells in latest setback".The Times.
  148. ^"Botic van de Zandschulp stuns five-time champion Novak Djokovic in Indian Wells | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved8 April 2025.
  149. ^Walker, Randy (20 March 2025)."Nick Kyrgios speaks from the Miami Open after first ATP win since 2022".World Tennis Magazine.
  150. ^Burns, Connor (20 March 2025)."A win 896 days in the making: inside Nick Kyrgios's turbulent road to recovery".The First Serve.
  151. ^Tignor, Steve (22 March 2025)."Nick Kyrgios moves on after Miami Open Defeat".tennis.com.
  152. ^ABC writers (22 March 2025)."Nick Kyrgios falls to Karen Khachanov in straight sets defeat at Miami Open".abc news.com.
  153. ^Patten, George (22 March 2025)."Nick Kyrgios sends message about Karen Kachanov on social media".The Tennis Gazette.
  154. ^"Scores".ATP Cup. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  155. ^"Davis Cup: The World Cup of Tennis – players". 27 November 2023.
  156. ^"Nick Kyrgios drafted into Australia's Davis Cup squad as Jerzy Janowicz ruled out for Poland". ABC News. 12 September 2013. Retrieved15 September 2013.
  157. ^"Rafter: Kyrgios a future Davis Cup star".Tennis Australia. Retrieved11 March 2023.
  158. ^"Australia beat Poland to return to Davis Cup World Group".The Guardian. Australian Associated Press. 15 September 2013.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved11 March 2023.
  159. ^"Nick Kyrgios dropped from Davis Cup squad". ABC News. 8 September 2015. Retrieved13 September 2015.
  160. ^Staff writers (22 October 2019)."Nick Kyrgios recalled to Australian Davis Cup team".The Canberra Times. p. 1.
  161. ^"Davis Cup – Teams".Daviscup.com. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  162. ^AAP Sources (22 November 2019)."Australia fall in Davis Cup quarter-final after Nick Kyrgios pulls out with injury".The Guardian. p. 1.
  163. ^Ahmed, Nurein (27 November 2023)."Was Nick Kyrgios Missing Piece that saw Australia Miss Out on Davis Cup Win Twice".Tennis Infinity. p. 1.
  164. ^Clarke, Lee (20 November 2024)."What Lleyton Hewitt has told Nick Kyrgios about the Davis Cup ahead of his return to tennis".The Tennis Gazette.
  165. ^abNick Kyrgios, the Reluctant Rising Star of Tennis, The New Yorker, 3 July 2017
  166. ^The changing public perception of Nick Kyrgios: still no angel but nor a lost cause,The Guardian, 19 January 2018
  167. ^Nick Kyrgios’ serve rated one of the most effective in history of tennis, Fox Sports, 10 January 2017
  168. ^What’s With The Underarm Serve? TennisBros
  169. ^In Final That Lived Up To The Hype, Djokovic Again Reigns Supreme At Wimbledon, Sports International, 10 July 2022
  170. ^Seward, Jordan (29 June 2022)."Nick Kyrgios' explosive press conference in FULL as Wimbledon star clashes with reporters".Daily Express.Reach plc.Archived from the original on 3 July 2022.
  171. ^abPierik, Jon; Siracusa, Claire (7 July 2022)."Nick's tricks: What makes Kyrgios' game so good?".The Sydney Morning Herald.Nine Entertainment.Archived from the original on 7 July 2022.
  172. ^The underarm serve: Nick Kyrgios is the main beneficiary to refining the shot Michael Chang created, SkySport, 29 June 2022
  173. ^"Roger Federer weighs in on underarm serve, Nick Kyrgios vs Rafael Nadal".News.com.au.News Corp Australia. 1 March 2019. Retrieved4 April 2019.
  174. ^Nick Kyrgios, the Reluctant Rising Star of Tennis, The New Yorker, 3 July 2017
  175. ^abcPearce, Linda (4 July 2014)."Nick Kyrgios to reunite with childhood coach in Canberra".The Sydney Morning Herald. London.
  176. ^Tuxworth, Jon (26 January 2013)."The next big thing: Kyrgios ready to be a star".The Sydney Morning Herald.
  177. ^"Kyrgios withdraws from Brisbane International".brisbaneinternational.com.au. 30 December 2013.
  178. ^"Nick Kyrgios splits from coach Simon Rea two weeks after he led him to an epic win over Rafael Nadal at Wimbledon".The Courier-Mail. 13 July 2014.
  179. ^"Nick Kyrgios: Wimbledon dream run ends with four-set loss to Canada's Milos Raonic".ABC News. 3 July 2014.
  180. ^Dutton, Chris (11 July 2014)."Todd Larkham and Josh Eagle team up to coach tennis star Nick Kyrgios".The Sydney Morning Herald.
  181. ^Kelly, Emma (23 June 2015)."Nick Kyrgios splits with coach Todd Larkham".The Sydney Morning Herald.
  182. ^"Nick Kyrgios content without a coach for now: 'I think I'm doing pretty well'".The Guardian Australia. 9 July 2015.
  183. ^"Nick Kyrgios brings in Lleyton Hewitt as coach and mentor".The Guardian Australia. 11 August 2015.
  184. ^Malone, Paul (16 May 2017)."Nick Kyrgios hires Frenchman Sebastien Grosjean as part-time coach".The Courier-Mail.
  185. ^Wallace, Ava (30 August 2017)."Nick Kygrios smashes racket after U.S. Open loss: 'I will get over it in probably half an hour'".The Washington Post.
  186. ^"Tennis News – Nick Kyrgios: Hiring a Coach Would Be a 'Waste Of Money' and 'Pointless'".Eurosport. 9 June 2020.
  187. ^Majendie, Matt (20 October 2016)."Jimmy Connors offers to coach Nick Kyrgios and make him 'the best'".Evening Standard.
  188. ^Santhanam, Anuradha (8 December 2016)."Pete Sampras would like to coach Nick Kyrgios".Sportskeeda.
  189. ^Kamakshi, Tandon (25 September 2017)."Kyrgios On Coach John McEnroe: 'I Think He Actually Understands Me'".Tennis.
  190. ^de Silva, Chris (31 May 2020)."John McEnroe admits opportunity to coach Nick Kyrgios would be a 'no-brainer'".Nine – WWOS.
  191. ^Timms, Aaron (17 November 2023)."Nick Kyrgios is a rattlingly opinionated and endlessly entertaining pundit".The Guardian. p. 1.
  192. ^"ESPN Welcomes Tennis Star Nick Kyrgios as Guest Commentator for the 2024 Australian Open". 10 January 2024.
  193. ^Trollope, Matt (4 October 2023)."Q&A with 'Australia's Open' director Ili Baré".Australian Open. Retrieved21 January 2025.
  194. ^Hall, Sandra (12 October 2023)."'Out of control' and 'awful': Documentary aims to reveal real Australian Open". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved21 January 2025.
  195. ^"Tennis Docuseries 'Break Point' Is Coming to Make a Racket".Netflix. Retrieved18 July 2023.
  196. ^ATP Staff (20 June 2023)."Relive The First 5 Episodes Of Netflix's Break Point".ATP Tour.
  197. ^abBrooks, Xan (7 January 2023)."Zero-sum game: Netflix's Break Point aces the loneliness of top-flight tennis".The Guardian.
  198. ^ATP Staff (26 June 2023)."Break Point Executive Producer Pulls Curtain On Memorable Kyrgios Scene".ATP Tour.
  199. ^ATP Staff (22 June 2023)."Break Point Episode 7 Recap: Kyrgios' Wimbledon Breakthrough".ATP Tour.
  200. ^ATP Staff (12 July 2023)."Kyrgios Reveals What Djokovic Has That 'You Can't Teach'".ATP Tour.
  201. ^Fraser, Stuart (30 November 2023)."Nick Kyrgios thanks Andy Murray for spotting signs of self-harm".The Times.
  202. ^news.com.au staff (3 December 2023)."Nick Kyrgios never read Shane Warne's open letter".news.com.au.
  203. ^Dampney, James (2 December 2023)."Nick Kyrgios drops stunning racism claims about legends of tennis".news.com.au.
  204. ^WWOS/AP staff (1 December 2023)."'Took me under his wing': Nick Kyrgios reveals depth of mental health struggles, thanks Andy Murray for support". Nine's Wide World of Sports.
  205. ^McGowan, Marc (1 December 2023)."'I hated waking up and being Nick Kyrgios': tennis star opens up on his mental health battle".The Age.
  206. ^"New series Good Trouble with Nick Kyrgios to premiere on Tennis Channel's T2 January 24".
  207. ^Pagliaro, Richard (9 January 2024)."Trouble Shooter: Kyrgios launches Good Trouble podcast".tennis now.com.
  208. ^Mesic, Dzevad (26 June 2024)."BBC commentator responds to new colleague Nick Kyrgios ripping him as 'clown' in 2023".Tennis World USA. Retrieved11 July 2024.
  209. ^Fordham, Josh (14 July 2024)."Nick Kyrgios hailed as the real champion of Wimbledon as he thrives in new job".talksport.com. p. 1.
  210. ^West, Ewan (12 July 2024)."Nick Kyrgios delivers Wimbledon prediction as he analyses Novak Djokovic, Carlos Alcaraz, chances".tennis365.com.
  211. ^Bray, Jonny (15 July 2024)."Wimbledon: An annihalation. Tim Henman and Nick Kyrgios react to Carlos Alcaraz final triumph over Novak Djokovic".Eurosport.com. p. 1.
  212. ^Tennery, Amy (4 September 2024)."At the US Open player-commentators become part of the story".Reuters.
  213. ^Ellis, Time (25 June 2025)."Did Nick Kyrgios Ace his Good Trouble Show at Wimbledon Theatre?".Forbes.
  214. ^McCrae, Donald (21 June 2025)."Nick Kyrgios: If I'd acted a bit differently I would have had a Wimbledon title".The Guardian.
  215. ^Martin, Roy (27 June 2025)."Nick Kyrgios joins talkSPORT for new daily Wimbledon unfiltered show".Radio Today.
  216. ^Johnson, Jack (26 June 2025)."My Heart goes out - Nick Kyrgios sympathises with Emma Raducanu".talkSPORT.
  217. ^"Australian tennis hopeful Nick Kyrgios might be 'the one' but first he needs to play Rafael Nadal".ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 1 July 2014. Retrieved28 March 2023.
  218. ^Nick Kyrgios' parents saw his rise coming after years of doing it tough, Fox Sports
  219. ^Australian tennis hopeful Nick Kyrgios might be 'the one' but first he needs to play Rafael Nadal, ABC News,
  220. ^Nick Kyrgios news: Australian opens up about self-harming and ‘having dark thoughts about life’, Tennis365, 15 February 2022
  221. ^Australian Associated Press (6 December 2024)."Nick Kyrgios will be in Australian Open Draw with Number 21 Ranking".Guardian Australia.
  222. ^De Silva, Chris (13 January 2025)."Nick Kyrgios Proves his Love Affair with Fans is like no Other".abc.net.au.
  223. ^Nick Kyrgios says he finally belongs at the top after Wimbledon final – now for the next step,The Guardian, 11 July 2022
  224. ^Cambers, Simon (3 July 2017)."Nick Kyrgios, the Reluctant Rising Star of Tennis".The New Yorker.
  225. ^abWimbledon Final: 'It’s Officially A Bromance' – Novak Djokovic Pays Tribute To 'Phenomenal' Nick Kyrgios, Eurosport, 11 July 2022
  226. ^"Coco Gauff Praises Nick Kyrgios At US Open Press-Conference | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved6 September 2022.
  227. ^"Wimbledon presenter Lee McKenzie gives the inside story on what it's like to interview 'fascinating' Nick Kyrgios". Tennis 365. 1 February 2023. Retrieved25 June 2024.
  228. ^"Inside F1 with Lee McKenzie, Fuelling Around". YouTube. 1 February 2023. Retrieved25 June 2024.
  229. ^"John McEnroe fearful Nick Kyrgios will 'run himself out' of tennis".The Guardian. Australian Associated Press. 25 November 2018. Retrieved28 June 2022.
  230. ^"John McEnroe: 'Nick Kyrgios is the most talented guy I've seen in a decade'". Eurosport. 9 January 2019. Retrieved28 June 2022.
  231. ^"BBC Radio 5 live – 6-Love-6". BBC.
  232. ^Nick Kyrgios labelled 'a sensational person' as myths debunked ahead of Wimbledon final,Daily Express, 9 July 2022
  233. ^Nick Kyrgios beats Brandon Nakashima to reach Wimbledon quarterfinals, Associated Press, 4 July 2022
  234. ^"Kyrgios, Stosur and others pledge $200 per ace to bushfire relief efforts".The Guardian. 2 January 2020.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved3 January 2020.
  235. ^TA targets Big Three for seven-figure fundraising frenzy,The Sydney Morning Herald, 3 January 2020
  236. ^Trollope, Matt (15 January 2020)."Stars step out to Rally for Relief".Australian Open.Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved3 February 2022.
  237. ^Kyrgios reacts to Djokovic's COVID-19 test, Nine News 23 June 2020
  238. ^Nick Kyrgios calls Novak Djokovic 'a tool' after Australian Open quarantine wish-list, Nine News, 18 January 2021
  239. ^Churches, Marc (7 January 2022)."'Not right': Nick Kyrgios' plea to end 'inhumane' Novak Djokovic treatment amid border drama".Wwos.nine.com.au.
  240. ^McMurtry, Andrew (9 January 2022).""It's not right": Nick Kyrgios slams Novak Djokovic's "inhumane" treatment".news.com.au.
  241. ^Hytner, Mike (13 August 2015)."'Kokkinakis banged your girlfriend': Nick Kyrgios sledges Stan Wawrinka".The Guardian.
  242. ^"Stan Wawrinka unhappy at 'unacceptable' Nick Kyrgios", BBC Sport, 13 August 2015.
  243. ^Patterson, Kelsey,"Nick Kyrgios fined, apologizes for insulting Stan Wawrinka at Rogers Cup", Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 13 August 2015.
  244. ^"Nick Kyrgios storms off court: 'Emotions got the better of me'".BBC Sport. Retrieved17 May 2019.
  245. ^"Nick Kyrgios defaulted from Italian Open after hurling chair across court".The Guardian. 16 May 2019. Retrieved17 May 2019.
  246. ^"French Open organisers to offer players AI protection against online abuse".The Guardian. 22 May 2023.
  247. ^"Tennis players to get protection from online abuse through new monitoring service".tennis.com. 20 December 2023.
  248. ^Baretta, Jean-Baptiste (22 May 2023)."Roland-Garros: Players to get social media protection".Roland-Garros.com news.
  249. ^Nick Kyrgios tells people 'you are not alone' after discussing self-harm & depression struggle, BBC, 24 February 2022
  250. ^Nick Kyrgios: Turn Up The Talk, YouTube, 30May 2022
  251. ^Nick Kyrgios Says He Used To Drink 20–30 Drinks Every Night Before Winning Tennis Matches, LadBible, 11 July 2022
  252. ^Meet Team Kyrgios, the people who dragged him back from the brink,The Sydney Morning Herald, 8 July 2022
  253. ^Leo Schlink (1 July 2014)."Nick Kyrgios set to benefit from upgraded deals with sponsor Yonex and clothing giant Nike".The Courier Mail. Retrieved21 February 2016.
  254. ^Imhoff, Dan (15 September 2021)."Road to Boston: Nick Kyrgios, Team World".lavercup.com. Retrieved19 March 2021.
  255. ^"Tennis star Nick visits Hotspur Way 14 November 2014". Tottenham Hotspur F.C.
  256. ^"Video".Saints.com.au. Retrieved12 February 2022.
  257. ^"Kyrgios left thrilled about Pickleball Slam rating news after previous investment in fledgling sport". 6 April 2023.
  258. ^"Vegan Tennis Players".peta.org.au. Retrieved12 July 2022.
  259. ^AAP (24 February 2022)."'One of my darkest periods' - Nick Kyrgios reveals mental health and drug struggles".The Guardian.
  260. ^"Who Is Nick Kyrgios' Girlfriend? All About Costeen Hatzi".Peoplemag. Retrieved27 January 2023.
  261. ^"New Tennis Fan Hatzi Is Kyrgios' Biggest Supporter | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved27 January 2023.
  262. ^Leach, Madison (16 January 2025)."Costeen Hatzi: Nick Kyrgios's Girlfriend".honey.nine.com.au.
  263. ^Giannopoulos, Bill (29 March 2025)."Greek-Australian Tennis Star Nick Kyrgios and influencer Costeen Hatzi Part Ways after nearly four years".Greek City Times.
  264. ^"Nick Kyrgios has assault charge dismissed despite guilty plea".ABC News. 3 February 2023. Retrieved3 February 2023.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toNick Kyrgios.
Amateur Era
Open Era
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nick_Kyrgios&oldid=1316737947"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp