Ailing Kyrgios sent packing by Raonic

Nick Kyrgios has limped out of the Australian Open in the first round, losing to Canadian Milos Raonic in straight sets at Melbourne Park.

Kyrgios

Nick Kyrgios struggled with a knee injury in his Australian Open first round loss to Milos Ranoic. (AAP)

Milos Raonic's "scary" serving has bundled an injury-troubled Nick Kyrgios out of the Australian Open in the first round on Melbourne Arena.

Kyrgios looked to be heading towards a retirement, requiring treatment on his right knee after each set, telling the trainer he felt like "absolute dogs**t".

The 23-year-old soldiered on before losing 6-4 7-6 (7-5) 6-4 in an hour and 56 minutes; his first opening-round loss at his home grand slam.

Once again, a visibly irritated Kyrgios spent much of the match preoccupied with his ailing body.

After being edged out in a make-or-break decider to the second set, he told his trainer he had "just given up basically".

"I've taken four tablets and it's gotten worse. It's f**king terrible. It's f**ked. It feels like dogs**t mate. Absolute dogs**t," he said.

Kyrgios took to the court without strapping and the pain seemed to first present itself late in the first set.

"I'm trying my nuts off, and when I try my nuts off, f**k, my knee starts hurting ... I can't even rock back on my serve, man."

With embattled Davis Cup captain Lleyton Hewitt and legend Tony Roche in the stands, Kyrgios did his best to combat his deteriorating condition and the huge serve of the former world No.3.

The 2016 Wimbledon finalist, Raonic fired down 30 aces, including an astonishing second set where he put together a winning run of 29 successive points on serve.

That streak came to an end in the tiebreak, when Kyrgios might have stolen the momentum with an astonishing around-the-net passing attempt that sailed 14 millimetres wide.

A minute later, Raonic slammed down his fastest serve of the match on set point, a 224kph rocket into Kyrgios's body, that gave the Canadian complete control.

Kyrgios denied his knee issue had anything to do with the result, saying he'd "never seen serving like that in my life".

"I was just watching it literally going side to side ... he was in such a good rhythm on serve, I couldn't do anything. He was way too good," he said.

"The way I played, I actually didn't play that bad. I actually thought I played okay. I competed well. I probably would have beaten 75 per cent of the draw. But Milos played scary."

Raonic's prize is a second-round clash with 2014 Australian Open champion Stan Wawrinka.


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Source: AAP



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