BREAKING POINT

Ex-Wimbledon champion Nick Kyrgios reveals he’d ‘down 20 to 30 drinks a NIGHT then play Rafael Nadal the next day’

The player is currently without a world ranking due to a little-known rule

NICK KYRGIOS has revealed he would "down 20 to 30 drinks" the night before some of his biggest matches.

The Aussie ace has been dubbed a tennis "bad boy" for his controversial behaviour on court from sensational X-rated rants to trash-talking opponents.

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Nick Kyrgios has opened up about his struggles with depressionCredit: Reuters
The Aussie ace says he once drank 30 drinks before facing Rafa Nadal at his lowest pointCredit: Getty Images - Getty
The sleeve he wore in 2019 was to hide his self-harm scarsCredit: Getty Images - Getty

Kyrgios, who won junior Wimbledon twice and made the men's singles final in 2022, has not played a competitive match since summer last year due to injuries.

And he has also battled mental health problems, telling he was in a bad state in 2019.

Kyrgios said: "I was just struggling with being who I was, it was hard at that time and I didn't feel like I could take a step back from the sport and kind of work on myself and get myself in the right headspace.

"I was just playing and playing and playing and kind of dealing with everything.

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"It was a dark time. I was drinking and I was spiralling out of control and I was continuing to play and travel. It was a lot."

Asked how many drinks he would have, Kyrgios added: "20 or 30 drinks, easy, I’d drink like a fish. 

"But then just wake up and play Rafa Nadal the next day. Give him a good run for his money."

Kyrgios would do most of his drinking alone and further struggles saw him turn to self-harm.

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He explained that Andy Murray was one of the people who spotted cuts on his arms and offered him support.

The 29-year-old would then play some of the world's best players, having come straight out a rehab facility and with a sleeve on so nobody else noticed his marks.

'This alone tells me' - Nick Kyrgios fumes at BBC coverage of Wimbledon clash just hours before joining commentary team

Kyrgios, who was once ranked at world No13, is currently without a world ranking as he has not played in over a year and has ventured into commentary and punditry.

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He plans to be back on the court in the near future but does not see himself having a lengthy career like Nadal or Murray.

He said: "I could come back now and beat 50 per cent of players but I don't want to do that because my fans deserve a better version of myself that I am now on the court. 

"I don't want to just participate and I know the world's not going to be nice on me when I come back.

"They're going to all of a sudden forget that I was out for a year and a half with injuries.

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"They're just going to think that it's the Nick Kyrgios that has all the expectation again. So when he loses, it's not okay.

"I look at how Andy Murray's doing it, and how Rafa is going out, I don't want to be like that either, I don't want to be kind of crawling to the finish line in a sense.

"What Murray's achieved in this sport is second to basically no one, unless you're Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer, or Nadal, the next person is Murray.

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