Kyrgios trolls Djokovic with a Twitter poll on ban



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Nick Kyrgios of Australia at the 2020 ATP Mexican Open in Acapulco.

Nick Kyrgios of Australia at the 2020 ATP Mexican Open in Acapulco.

Héctor Vivas / Getty Images

Nick kyrgios opened a cheeky poll on Twitter Monday asking how many years he would be suspended if he hit a referee with a ball after 17-time Grand Slam winner Novak Djokovic failed at the US Open.

The Australian has fought an ongoing battle with the Serb in recent months over his ill-fated Adria Tour exhibition series, lashing out at the “stupidity” of the world number one after several players contracted the coronavirus.

And she was quick to give her opinion after Djokovic was sensationally disqualified from the US Open for hitting a female linesman in the throat with a ball that was fired in disgust after losing her serve.

Fuel Kyrgios, who was punished with a 16-week suspension last year for a series of outbursts on the court, took to social media to ask his followers what would happen if he had hit the linesman.

“Trade me for the Pranksters Incident” he said, using the nickname Djokovic.

“‘Accidentally hit the ball boy in the throat’. How many years would they ban me?” asked the Australian.

The options given were five, 10 or 20 years with the poll attracting more than 60,000 responses in its first hour, with the majority voting for 20 years.

The United States Tennis Association said Djokovic, who apologized, would lose all qualifying points and prize money from the tournament.

While most took Kyrgios’s tweet as a lighthearted dig, not everyone was impressed.

“Slight difference: you did much worse” one user pointed out, while another wrote: “Same grief as Djoko. Stop victimizing yourself, move on.”

The ATP opened an investigation into Kyrgios last year after an explosive collapse at the Cincinnati Masters where he broke two rackets and launched an abusive tirade against the chair umpire before appearing to spit at the referee.

He was fined $ 113,000 for abuse of the ball, leaving the field without permission, audible obscenity and unsportsmanlike conduct during his loss to Russia’s Karen Khachanov.

While Kyrgios was penalized for the Cincinnati outbursts, he avoided further punishment by calling the ATP “quite corrupt” during the 2019 US Open after “clarifying” his comment.

Kyrgios, ranked just 40th but with a great draw card, chose to remain in Canberra and not play in this year’s US Open due to the pandemic.



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