But really, is it possible to hate tennis when it’s literally giving you the clothes on your back and the food on your table?
Of course it is.
How many people hate their job, and complain about it incessantly, even going into fits over the moroseness of their lives? At least they have the option to switch offices, move cities or even change careers. Kyrgios has invested his entire life into tennis, and nothing else.
Remember when Andre Agassi admitted passionate hatred for tennis in his autobiography, Open? But Agassi is a former No. 1 and winner of eight majors, and retired before uncovering all his skeletons.
Still, Kyrgios is just 21, and growing up in the spotlight of a much more unforgiving era. If you can get past the disgruntled “too cool for this” vibe he oozes, you’ll notice he’s maturing, albeit slowly. Just look at his response when a reporter asked what he would change in tennis.
“I don't want to change the sport at all. It's given me a lot of things,” Kyrgios said. “It's given me a great opportunity. I've met a lot of people through it.”
Those people include good friends, like Jack Sock, and his girlfriend, fellow pro Alja Tomljanovic. He’s going to need to meet another person to fully turn all of his obvious potential into Slam success, specifically a coach. Instead of being stubbornly contrarian, Kyrgios reveals that he is opening up to the idea.
“I think that's one area where I obviously need to start taking a bit more seriously,” he said. “I mean, I don't think there's anyone in the Top 100 without a coach except for me. That needs to change.”
No matter what happens next, tennis is stuck to Kyrgios permanently, whether he likes it or not. That’s not going to change.