WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — When 2022 Wimbledon runner-up Nick Kyrgios steps out on No. 1 Court on Monday at the All England Club, it will be just his second singles match since October.
Asked Sunday at a pre-tournament news conference whether he missed tennis during the time away caused by a knee injury and surgery, Kyrgios replied with the hint of a smile: “No, I don’t miss the sport at all, to be fair. I was almost dreading coming back a little bit. But it’s my job.”
Kyrgios missed the Australian Open and the French Open during his lengthy absence and can’t be sure whether his body is ready for best-of-five-set competition.
Aryna Sabalenka says she wants to talk only about tennis during Wimbledon and not the war in Ukraine that became a contentious topic for the Belarusian during the last Grand Slam event.
Top-ranked doubles player Katerina Siniakova won her first grass-court singles title by beating Lucia Bronzetti 6-2, 7-6 (5) in a rain-affected final at the Bad Homburg Open on Saturday.
Venus Williams is 43 and about to play singles at Wimbledon for the 24th time. She will be in action on Day 1 at the All England Club on Centre Court against Elina Svitolina.
“I still think there’s some question marks, for sure,” said the 28-year-old Australian, who plays David Goffin of Belgium in the first round.
“I look at my preparations last year coming in, I probably had the most ideal preparation possible,” Kyrgios said, a Boston Celtics hat perched on his head. “It couldn’t be any different this year.”
And it’s been difficult, he said, to think that people might expect him to be able to play at his best now — or anything like how he was able to perform when he reached his first Grand Slam final a year ago before losing to Novak Djokovic.
Kyrgios has been frank about mental health issues he dealt with in the past, including feeling suicidal after losing at Wimbledon in 2019.
“It took seven, eight years to be able to just open up about that. I kept it very close to the chest for a long time. But I think it’s important,” he said Sunday. “I think a lot of athletes kind of go through that. But … especially males felt like it was kind of hard to open up, admit they were struggling. I feel very different to how I was feeling obviously throughout that period in 2019. Yeah, look, I guess I feel great now.”
MATTEO BERRETTINI OFF SOCIAL MEDIA TO AVOID POSITIVE WORDS
Matteo Berrettini is ignoring social media for the time being. Not simply, mind you, to avoid negative comments from strangers — or not just for that reason, anyway — but to stay away from positive messages, too.
Let’s let the player who was a finalist at Wimbledon in 2021 explain:
“People believe in me, which is beautiful, but I also got to a point where I realized that nine out of 10 people who ask me something, the next phrase they write is, ‘This year, you’ll win Wimbledon,’” Berrettini said Sunday. “And so I need to protect myself from that sort of thing, too.”
Even thoughts from other people that are meant to be supportive can get in his head and create problems, in part by raising the pressure with regard to what sort of result he is “supposed” to achieve.
“I consider myself pretty mature,” said Berrettini, a 27-year-old from Italy who has been ranked as high as No. 6 and is outside the top 35 now, “but it’s not easy to handle it all.”
Particularly during a season when hand surgery and an abdominal muscle problem have limited him to 14 matches.
“I need to try to focus on the things that brought me to where I got, such as hard work, keeping my head down, doing what I like to do — fight, and believe in my team and my family,” Berrettini said. “So that’s what I’m doing.”
He missed Wimbledon a year ago after testing positive for COVID-19 and faces Lorenzo Sonego — a countryman and his best friend on tour — in the first round on Tuesday.
ELENA RYBAKINA DEFENDS HER TITLE
A year ago at Wimbledon, everything was new to Elena Rybakina.
She had been past the fourth round only once — and never past the quarterfinals — in 11 previous Grand Slam appearances. She was not among the leading seeds or among the favorites.
And now? Now she returns to the All England Club as the defending champion. Plus, she showed that was no fluke by reaching the final at the Australian Open in January.
“I know what to expect, how it works, if you actually go that far in the tournament,” Rybakina said Sunday. “Psychologically I would say that it’s a bit easier than when you don’t know what to expect.”
She is seeded No. 3 in the women’s bracket and will play Shelby Rogers of the United States in the first round on Tuesday.
Rybakina pulled out of the French Open before her third-round match last month because of a viral illness, then cited that reason again when she withdrew from a grass-court tournament in England last week.
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