Kyrgios asked the referee to chase Tsitsipas from the field
Tsitsipas twice polished towards the audience when fighting Kyrgios in the third round of Wimbledon on the afternoon of July 2, in which the first took place when he lost the second set was considered more serious. The Greek player did not give the ball to the staff to pick up the ball but made the left hand to the stands. The ball grazed a woman and scared this person.
Kyrgios immediately asked the referee to disqualify Tsitsipas. Australian player said it was a serious behavioral error that needs to be punished. But, the referee only warned Tstisipas because the ball has not been hit by anyone.
"He just polished the audience without being punished?", Kyrgios questioned the referee. The world's No. 40 player then refused to play, asking the supervisors to solve the incident.
Tsitsipas is one thing after repeat the same behavior in set three. After the role of the Kyrgios, the Greek arms swinging hard and polishing the audience's seat at the press conference, Tsitsipos admitted to the Kyrgios Guild, not the audience.
"I feel like Kyegos is manipulating the opponent and the referee is like an evil bully," Sisipas said of the opponent. "He does everything to distract you. He is disappointed and upset about what happened on the field. Kyegos can win in a cleaner way."
Besides the two shots on the audience, Tsitsipas also made a smash on the net almost hitting Kyrgios. The Australian player later asked to change the referee because he thought that he ignored many Tsitsipas errors.
"I am not disrespectful to anyone, just debate with the referee," Kyrgios said in a quick interview after the match. "This circus is Tsitsipas. He has some serious problems today. I can't be a bullying because he is the one who hit me on me."
Kyrgios and Tsitsipas frequently speaking over the voices of each other, closest to Halle Open last month, the lacrosse Hand of Australia was ironic the routine of Tsitas when they were arguing with the referee.
Kjeldahl has won four of his five games against the junior, and yesterday's match was their first encounter in a Grand Slam. Kjeldahl's opponent in the fourth round of Wimbledon is Nakajima Brandon. If he wins, he will repeat his best performance in the Grand Slam in the quarter-finals in 2014.