Kyrgios right to hate French Open\, says Tomic

Kyrgios right to hate French Open, says Tomic

AFP  |  Paris 

suffered a dispiriting exit from on Tuesday and admitted Australian compatriot was right to say the tournament 'sucks'.

Tomic slumped to a 6-1, 6-4, 6-1 defeat by of the United States, leaving him with just three wins in 2019.

The final set on a chilly and damp Court 14 was over in just 20 minutes and the match in 88 minutes, the quickest of the tournament so far.

Fellow firebrand Kyrgios withdrew from with an last week but not before saying: "Get rid of the clay, man. Who likes the clay, it is so bad.

"The sucks compared to this place. Sucks. Absolute sucks." Tomic, never far from controversy, was happy to concur.

"I agree with him, with everything," he said during a monosyllabic press conference. "The tournament is not for me."

Tomic's lack of enthusiasm for the task in hand was encapsulated on match point where a serve he thought was out led him to the net to offer his hand.

"I thought the match was over, it would be nice to give him the point because that's how I felt. But it's okay. We replayed it."

Accused in the past of not trying in matches and once dubbed by the Australian media as 'Tomic the tank engine', he insisted he was at 100 percent on Tuesday.

"Pretty sure I did (gave his best). But, you know, the surface is not good for me." "I mean, it's not difficult. It's just my game is not built for this surface. Everything I do is not good for it.

"But as long as I'm doing the right thing now, for the next month, is important for me. That's my focus." That focus, however, does not include where his next tournament will be as fast approaches.

"Honestly I have no clue. I'll go to the hotel and see. I have no idea where I'm playing," he added.

The fiery Australian, who shot to fame by making quarter-finals in 2011 and went on to reach the world top 20, arrived in deep in another slump. Ranked 84 in the world, he retired with at last week against Canada's Steven Diez, ranked a lowly 262.

His most recent Grand Slam appearance in in January was overshadowed by a feud with captain

The of described Tomic as "bad for the culture of Australian tennis".

Tomic is not hoping for a thaw in the cold war anytime soon.

"I haven't even thought about it since January, so no." For Fritz, it was a first career win at and backed up a solid season on European clay. The 21-year-old American, ranked 42, was a semi-finalist in last week, losing to eventual champion

He also qualified for the and Masters before falling to and respectively.

The city is also special for the American -- back in 2016, he proposed to his girlfriend in the shadow of the

The two are now married with a son,

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, May 28 2019. 19:30 IST