When Nick Kyrgios goes down a break, it's easy to think the set is over. After all, he wins just 11.8 percent of his return games, listing him 78th on the ATP Tour.

But, trailing 1-3 in the opening set of his fourth-round match in Miami, against Borna Coric, Kyrgios broke back with the help of what has to be the most creatively constructed point of the tournament.

After bunting a drop shot to follow in toward the net, he knocked a look-the-other-way volley, forcing Coric to make a backhand stick save. Then Kyrgios, having to chase the ball all the way back to his ad-court corner, pulled off a crosscourt passing tweener, a shot with a target so small it made all his prior tweener experience necessary.

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"Honestly, I wasn't going to run for the lob. Then I just ran for it and somehow I hit the shot," Kyrgios said. "I don't really think when I'm out there. I just play."

Kyrgios broke to win that game, and then once more to win the set, 6-4. But it was mostly downhill for him after that.

"Kind of got a little bored in the second set, like my concentration just started veering off," Kyrgios said. "He's a good enough player to just capitalize. And, yeah, I mean, I lost the match on my racquet today, no doubt about it. But, you know, it's no surprise, honestly. I have done it before."

In Set 2, Kyrgios was broken to go down 2-4. He subsequently smashed his racquet and gave it to a fan in a Kyrie Irving Celtics jersey. (It warranted an automatic code-violation warning, which will be important later.)

And, this time, Kyrgios wasn't able to break back, and lost the set 6-3.

Between sets, he played a game of Flip the Water Bottle, as he's known to do.

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The third set wasn't an improvement for him, either, as he lost his serve again in the fifth game. And, later, serving down 2-4 and 30-40, Kyrgios was assessed a second code violation, for an audible obscenity directed at a spectator. Thanks to the racquet smash, this one was worth a point penalty, and he immediately went down a second break.

In the final game, Kyrgios managed one last incredible shot, —a 106-mph return winner—but it wasn't enough to get him back into contention.

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Kyrgios, as has come to be unsurprising from him, took to Twitter shortly after the match.

"It's a tough loss. I mean, there were some really cool points, obviously," Kyrgios said. "I just have to be better mentally. Simple as that. I've got to lock in, just take care of 40-15 points, not screw around so much."

Coric, meanwhile, has a quarterfinal with Felix Auger-Aliassime to prepare for.