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Battling Kyrgios ready to play through pain

PARIS (Reuters) - Nick Kyrgios is having a "hard time" with hip and shoulder injuries but the Australian said he has done all he can to be ready for his French Open first round match against German veteran Philipp Kohlschreiber on Tuesday.

Battling Kyrgios ready to play through pain
(Reuters)

The 22-year-old firebrand, seeded 18th at Roland Garros, was forced to pull out of the ATP Masters 1000 tournament in Rome with a hip problem and was dumped out of the first round in Lyon last week to a rank outsider.

A separate injury to his serving shoulder has further complicated things for the moody talent, who has been receiving physiotherapy every day in the leadup to the second grand slam of the season.

Kyrgios has long had problems with his right hip and said the latest injury was similar to the one that forced him to retire during his third round match at the U.S. Open last year.

“Obviously my body’s giving me a bit of a hard time at the moment, but I’m ready to play,” Kyrgios told Australian media.

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“It’s the same sort of stuff as the U.S. Open. A couple of things going on, but then nothing major that I have to instantly pull out or anything like that.

“I can work through it."

Kyrgios was also hampered by a knee problem in the leadup to the Australian Open and was receiving cortisone injections to try to settle the injury before he crashed out of the second round to Andreas Seppi.

He said he was being spared injections in Paris but was getting "a lot of treatment" on the hip, an injury which he hoped would not trouble him throughout his career.

There was little prospect of it settling in the short-term, however.

“I think you can get rid of it. It probably needs some rest and then I can sort of build up again. That’s how it’s going to get away,” he said.

"But at this stage it's a tough period. Obviously I haven’t had much rest.

“We’ll see after this week how it pulls up and then obviously my main focus is Wimbledon.

"The grass suits my game most and I enjoy London and I enjoy playing there, so I think the grass is obviously my best chance.”

(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Peter Rutherford)


2 min read

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Source: Reuters



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