NEW YORK, Aug 30 — Australian Nick Kyrgios had not even started his second-round match at the US Open yesterday before he found himself in the crosshairs of another umpire, this time over a phrase emblazoned on his popped up collar.

Kyrgios, already in hot water for calling the ATP “corrupt” this week, was going through his warm-up on the Grandstand court when he suddenly flipped up the collar on his shirt to reveal the words “Just Do You”, a play on Nike’s “Just Do It” slogan.

The umpire noticed and told Kyrgios the lettering had to be concealed. Kyrgios repeatedly asked why and then called for a supervisor, threatening not to start the match until he had been shown the rule book.

But Kyrgios quickly relented, took the court and came out firing as he put on a serving masterclass to blitz Frenchman Antoine Hoang and set up a third-round showdown with Russian Andrey Rublev.

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“They thought it was a slogan, but it wasn’t. It wasn’t anything to do with a marketing thing. It was just a design issue,” Kyrgios told reporters.

“They must have read it wrong. I think they thought it said Just Do It, like the slogan. It was actually Just Do You. I think it was a mix-up. It’s all cleared up now. I can wear that. I can wear the collar up.”

Given the events of his opening match, during which Kyrgios demanded to know why more was not being done to control the crowd after a woman got in his line of sight during a serve, many fans would have anticipated another wild night.

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But Kyrgios, apart from his usual outbursts, mostly aimed at himself or his box, steered clear off any major meltdown, although he did get into a conversation with the umpire in the third set when an ace appeared to give him a 5-3 lead.

The chair umpire called “game” but Hoang challenged the call and the ensuing review showed that Kyrgios’s first serve attempt was actually long.

An unhappy Kyrgios loudly questioned why a challenge was even allowed after “game” was called and again asked to speak to a supervisor, who calmly explained the rules on challenges.

“He called game. My opponent challenged once the umpire called game. I just thought that wasn’t right,” said Kyrgios. — Reuters