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Kyrgios's Wimbledon campaign takes a twist

Darren WaltonAAP
Wimbledon quarter-finalist Nick Kyrgios has been summonsed to face ACT Magistrates Court on Aug 2.
Camera IconWimbledon quarter-finalist Nick Kyrgios has been summonsed to face ACT Magistrates Court on Aug 2. Credit: AP

Nick Kyrgios's Wimbledon campaign has been thrown into turmoil, with the mercurial quarter-finalist facing common assault charges back home in Australia.

Kyrgios will play unseeded Chilean Cristian Garin for a place in the semi-finals on Wednesday, barely 24 hours after being summonsed to face ACT Magistrates Court on August 2.

The Canberra Times newspaper reported the assault allegedly involved a former girlfriend and quoted Kyrgios's barrister Jason Moffett as saying his 27-year-old client was taking the allegation "very seriously".

Kyrgios has already been grilled by London tabloids for his behaviour during the first week of the championships after the one-time world No.13 was fined $10,000 ($A17,600) following his first-round win over British wildcard Paul Jubb and another $4,000 ($A5,800) after a fractious third-round victory over Stefanos Tsitsipas.

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He can expect another lively press conference after playing Garin, win or lose.

The pending court case is an unwanted distraction after Kyrgios promised to fight through the pain barrier of a shoulder injury that required two rounds of treatment during his five-set fourth-round win over American Brandon Nakashima on Monday.

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"I woke up after Tsitsipas and had some shoulder pain. I've played so much tennis in the last month and a half, so I almost knew that it was time for my body to start feeling some niggles," he said.

"I think that's normal. At this time in the event I don't think anyone is feeling 100 per cent.

"Obviously Rafa (Nadal), you see him dealing with something niggling all the time. I just don't think there's anyone feeling 100 per cent.

"It's just something I manage. Mentally I feel like I just deal with these things a lot better now."

Kyrgios said he never felt physically 100 per cent against Nakashima.

"But mentally I stayed quite calm, knowing I wasn't able to serve full out for the whole five sets. Obviously I had to take painkillers," he said.

"I wasn't returning well for a period of time, then I just stuck to my guns in the fifth set. I felt like the level in the fifth set for me was raised whereas his level kind of went away a little bit."

Victory over the 43rd-ranked Garin would vault Kyrgios into a maiden grand slam semi-final against either Nadal or American 11th seed Taylor Fritz.

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