'I've come of age': Smitten Kyrgios turns up heat at Indian Wells

Kyrgios, who was a wild card entry into Indian Wells, will next face 32nd-seeded Argentine Federico Delbonis on Saturday.

Published : Mar 11, 2022 11:22 IST

Nick Kyrgios of Australia looks on during his match against SEbastian Baez of Argentina at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells Tennis Garden .
Nick Kyrgios of Australia looks on during his match against SEbastian Baez of Argentina at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells Tennis Garden .
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Nick Kyrgios of Australia looks on during his match against SEbastian Baez of Argentina at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells Tennis Garden .

A smiling, smitten Nick Kyrgios said he has never felt better following his first-round win at Indian Wells - and made it clear girlfriend Costeen Hatzi is a big reason why he feels he has come of age.

The Australian, who gave a hilarious cooking demonstration at a Citibank-sponsored tennis dinner prior to the tournament, turned up the heat again on Thursday, overwhelming young Argentine Sebastian Baez 6-4 6-0 in a little over an hour.

"I'm just excited to be back at this tournament. It has been a couple of years because of the (coronavirus) pandemic and taking time off to get my mind and body right," he told reporters after the win.

"My body feels as good as it has ever felt. I feel like I'm moving and playing really well. It's good to be back."

Kyrgios in recent years had become as well known for on-court antics and outbursts as he was for his punishing serve.

READ: Osaka blows Stephens away on windy day at Indian Wells

But he said he is finally free of the left knee pain that plagued him for the past year and a half and is in a great place emotionally.

Asked what contributed to his improved mindset, he smiled and pointed to Hatzi, who was seated in the front row of the press conference.

"I was really struggling. I wasn't happy," he said.

"The tennis world wanted me to be a certain player, and I was trying to be something that I wasn't for so many years. It put me in a dark place. I was letting people down, I fell out with my family. It was tough," he said.

"One day I looked in the mirror and said that this isn't the type of person that I'm trying to be. And now I'm a completely different person. I'm comfortable in my own skin, I'm not trying to please anyone. I'm not trying to be anyone else.

READ: Nadal says stronger penalties needed to curb player outbursts

"I'm Nick Kyrgios and I just go out there and play and have fun and if I win, I win and if I lose, I lose.

"Life is good."

Asked how he celebrated the doubles Grand Slam championship he won with childhood friend Thanasi Kokkinakis at January's Australian Open, the 26-year-old said they took different paths.

"He stayed in Melbourne for three days, and I took the first flight out with my girlfriend and we went back to Sydney.

"I've come of age, man," he added with a smile.

Kyrgios, who was a wild card entry into Indian Wells, will next face 32nd-seeded Argentine Federico Delbonis on Saturday

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