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<i>Nick Kyrgios has allayed injury concerns, playing with freedom in a tight doubles loss with Novak Djokovic that ended his Brisbane International comeback. </i>
A fluent and upbeat Nick Kyrgios has shrugged aside the pain in his surgically repaired wrist as his Brisbane International comeback ended in a tight doubles loss.
The Australian fulfilled his promise to play alongside Novak Djokovic in the second-round men's doubles on Wednesday after a taxing three-set loss to Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard in his long-awaited singles return a night earlier.
Such was the battering he took from the big-serving French star, Kyrgios had forecast a rough day for his serving arm and even suggested his scheduled Australian Open return later this month was in doubt.
But the 29-year-old, aside from occasionally grabbing at his right bicep, looked comfortable as he hit serves upwards of 200kmh and again showed touch, agility and reflexes that belied two-and-a-half years of virtually no tour-level tennis.
The all-star pair lost 6-2 3-6 10-8 to top seeds and new partnership Michael Venus and Nikola Mektic.
Behind some spirited Kyrgios returning and deadly kick serves they had the match on their racquet.
But a Djokovic double fault at 8-6 was disastrous as the duo lost the last four points of the match tiebreak but still walked off smiling.
"Incredible," Mektic told the sold-out crowd.
"I was very happy when I saw them, I could play them on the first of January.
"It's an amazing feeling to start the year like this and we knew there would be points like that against players like this."
Djokovic, seeking his 100th ATP title, will likely play his second-round singles match on Thursday against Gael Monfils while Kyrgios is keen to return to Canberra to rest before contemplating a Melbourne Park assault.
The mere fact he walked onto Pat Rafter Arena on Wednesday was a positive though, Kyrgios equal parts encouraged and sobered by his absorbing 7-6 (7-2) 6-7 (7-4) 7-6 (7-3) on Tuesday night.
"I've got six holes in my hand and one in my arm (from surgery); not one tennis player has ever had this surgery and come back and tried to play again," he said on Tuesday night.
"It's all really an experimental (process) ... no real protocol of how it's going to be or how it's going to pull up.
"It's very sore at the moment.
"I used to abuse being youthful in this sport and not doing any cool down or anything like that, so I guess it's biting me in the arse right now."
In the singles, Jordan Thompson is the last Australian man standing after overcoming a slow start against Alex Michelsen, quickly going 3-0 down, and rallying strongly to win their last-16 clash 7-5 6-3 to book a quarter-final date with defending champion Grigor Dimitrov.
With a typically resilient display in the late match, world No.26 Thompson saved three set points in the opener when 5-2 down and clawed his way back to break the rising American twice to clinch the stanza.
After earning another break midway through the second set, Thompson was briefly held up as Michelsen saved three match points before the Sydneysider wrapped up victory in an hour and 42 minutes.
The evergreen Bulgarian Dimitrov had earlier defeated another in-form Australian, Aleksandar Vukic, in impressive fashion 6-2 7-6 (7-5).