Nick Kyrgios confirmed on social media that he will not compete in the singles draw at the
Australian Open, stating that he does not feel ready to play five-set matches. However, the 30-year-old did confirm that he will be in Melbourne to contest the doubles main draw.
Tournament organisers still have several wildcards to confirm for the menโs singles draw, with Kyrgios long seen as one of the names who could potentially receive an invitation. Other possibilities have also been circulating, including former champion Stan Wawrinka, who
admitted a few days ago that he had no information on whether he would be granted a wildcard or not.
Kyrgios played a couple of exhibition matches during the off-season, but his level failed to fully convince. His appearance in Brisbane was seen as a key opportunity to assess where he stood at the start of the seasonโsomething Tennis Australia could take into account when deciding whether to allocate one of their wildcard spots to him.
The former Wimbledon runner-up returned to action on Tuesday against American Aleksandar Kovacevic (No. 58), with the American
claiming a straightforward 6โ3, 6โ4 victory. It marked Kyrgiosโ first official singles match since March 2024, having played only a handful of matches across the past three seasons.
Kyrgios explains decision to step aside from singles draw
Amid speculation surrounding Kyrgiosโ potential appearance in the Australian Open singles drawโalong with
voices such as Greg Rusedski arguing that wildcards should go to players fully prepared to compete over five setsโKyrgios himself addressed the situation. On Friday, he clarified via social media that he had spoken with tournament organisers and decided to withdraw from consideration for the singles draw.
โAfter some good conversations with TA, Iโve made the call to focus on doubles for this yearโs AO,โ the former world No. 13 posted on
his Instagram stories. โIโm fit and back on court, but 5-setters are a different beast and Iโm not quite ready to go the distance yet.โ
โThis tournament means everything to me, but Iโd rather give my spot to someone whoโs ready to make their moment count. Itโs all building blocks and Iโll be back next year and pumped to compete. See you out there.โ
Kyrgios already featured in doubles in Brisbane,
teaming up with close friend Thanasi Kokkinakis, who has also dealt with injuries over the past year and was returning to competition after undergoing pectoral surgery. The local duoโAustralian Open champions in 2022โrecorded an impressive first-round win over doubles specialists Rajeev Ram and Matthew Ebden, both former world No. 1s in the discipline. However, they fell in the second round to sixth seeds Sadio Doumbia and Fabien Reboul.
While Kyrgios and Kokkinakis have not yet been officially confirmed as a pairing, all signs point to the Special Kโs reuniting once again at Melbourne Park.