Nadal beats Kyrgios in 3 sets at Indian Wells, goes to 19-0

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Rafael Nadal, of Spain, celebrates after defeating Nick Kyrgios, of Australia, during a quarterfinal match in the BNP Paribas Open tennis tournament Thursday, March 17, 2022, in Indian Wells, Calif. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. ā€“ Rafael Nadal defeated Nick Kyrgios 7-6 (0), 5-7, 6-4 Thursday to reach the semifinals of the BNP Paribas Open in a match featuring obscenities, underhand serves, a point penalty and smashed rackets.

Nadal improved to 19-0 this year, the third-best start to a season since 1990.

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ā€œHappy about that third set because it wasn't easy after the end of the second. It was terrible for me,ā€ he said. ā€œBut I hold it emotionally, and mentally, I think I was ready to keep fighting.ā€

So was Kyrgios.

After the post-match handshake, Kyrgios walked to his seat and smashed his racket on the court. It bounced up and away, nearly striking a ball boy standing at the back of the court. Kyrgios walked off to a mix of boos and cheers.

ā€œIt landed a meter from my foot and skidded and nearly hit him,ā€ Kyrgios said. ā€œIā€™m human. Things happen like that. Obviously it was a very misfortunate bounce. I think if I did that a million times over it wouldnā€™t have gone that way.ā€

Nadal was on his side of the court and said he didn't see Kyrgios toss his racket after the match.

ā€œI think Nick had a great attitude during the whole match in terms of fighting spirit, and of course he has his personality, his character,ā€ Nadal said. ā€œSometimes he does things that I donā€™t like, but I respect because of different character, different kind of points of view, and different kind of education.ā€

Trailing 0-6 in the first-set tiebreaker, Kyrgios was serving when the chair umpire assessed him a point penalty for an audible obscenity to a fan, giving Nadal the set. Kyrgios dropped the balls he was holding and calmly walked to his seat.

In the sixth game of the first set, Kyrgios led 40-love when he served underhanded. Nadal stepped up and bashed a forehand winner down the line. Kyrgios responded with a 140-mph ace to go up 4-2. He also had leads of 3-1 and 5-3 in the set.

Nadal won three straight games to lead 6-5 in the first. On the changeover, Kyrgios angrily tossed his racket. He gave the bent racket to a young boy in the stands.

ā€œI was two points away from the first set and I felt like if I had won that first set, the way I was playing, I could have run away with it,ā€ Kyrgios said. ā€œSo obviously, I was frustrated, but it was a hell of a match.ā€

Early in the second set, the chair umpire scolded a man in the stands who repeatedly yelled, ā€œNick! Nick!ā€ The umpire said, ā€œTen thousand people want to watch tennis and you're the only one screaming.ā€ The man piped down. Later, the umpire told the crowd not to yell out between first and second serves.

Tied 3-all in the second set and serving at 40-love, Kyrgios served an underhanded ace to go up 4-3. They stayed on serve until Kyrgios broke Nadal in the 12th game. Nadal's drop shot caught Kyrgios by surprise and the Australian let loose with an F-bomb during the point. He recovered to make the return, Nadal sent it back and Kyrgios won the set with a leaping backhand volley.

Tied 2-all in the third, Kyrgios engaged with a spectator sitting next to actor Ben Stiller. Uninterested in the man's suggestions on how to play, Kyrgios replied that he didn't tell Stiller how to act.

ā€œWhen youā€™re a spectator and youā€™re watching professionals play tennis, you should just be quiet,ā€ Kyrgios said. ā€œLike, just sit and enjoy the show. I thought it was a pretty high level match and Iā€™m just asking for a little bit of respect.ā€

The interaction didn't deter the Aussie. He fought off a break point and took a 3-2 lead with back-to-back aces at 140 mph and 137 mph.

Kyrgios double-faulted on game point to trail 4-3. Kyrgios held to lead 5-4, but Nadal closed out the 2-hour, 46-minute match by serving a love game. He set up match point with a 116-mph ace and then hit a forehand winner off a short ball.

ā€œHe played a few points well and he got out of it and thatā€™s what he does,ā€ Kyrgios said. ā€œThatā€™s what makes him great.ā€

Nadal will face the future in the semifinals. Heā€™ll play 18-year-old fellow Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz, who beat defending champion and No. 12 seed Cameron Norrie, 6-4, 6-3.

Alcaraz reached his first Masters 1000 semifinal, having won 17 of his last 18 matches. Heā€™s coming off a tournament title in Rio de Janeiro last month.

Defending women's champion Paula Badosa advanced to the semifinals with a 6-3, 6-2 win over Veronika Kudermetova of Russia. Badosa next plays No. 6 seed Maria Sakkari, who defeated Elena Rybakina, 7-5, 6-4.

The other semifinal features No. 3 Iga Swiatek against 2015 champion Simona Halep.

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