Tennis: Raonic makes winning start with McEnroe, beating Kyrgios at Queen's Club

LONDON (AFP) - Milos Raonic made a winning start under coach John McEnroe, as the Canadian third seed fought back to beat Australia's Nick Kyrgios 6-7 (5-7), 6-4, 6-4 at Queen's Club on Wednesday.

Raonic hired American legend McEnroe as his new coach earlier this month and the pair are working together for the first time at the Wimbledon warm-up event in London.

McEnroe, a seven-time Grand Slam champion, has been putting Raonic through his paces on the practice courts at Queen's for several days and the early returns on their relationship look promising as the world No. 9 subdued the dangerous Kyrgios in a rain-interrupted first-round tie.

Raonic will face Czech world No. 68 Jiri Vesely for a place in the quarter-finals.

With Wimbledon looming later this month, the 25-year-old turned to McEnroe as he looks to reach a first Grand Slam final after semi-final losses at the Australian Open in January and Wimbledon in 2014.

"You can't miss him. He has been on the court the whole time. I wanted to hit with some righties, but he is always there!" Raonic smiled when asked how he was finding life with the forthright McEnroe.

In contrast to Raonic, the controversial Kyrgios admitted recently that he is happy to go into Wimbledon without a coach.

The 21-year-old, who has become notorious for his petulant on-court antics, has been able to call up Australian Davis Cup captain Lleyton Hewitt for advice.

But a late meltdown against Raonic suggested he is in need of the kind of experience a coach like McEnroe could provide.

Raonic had the momentum after winning the second set to level the match at one-set all before bad light forced play to be suspended on Tuesday evening.

The deciding set was tight until Kyrgios lost his focus and served two successive double faults to gift Raonic a break in the ninth game.

Raonic looked like squandering the opportunity when he handed Kyrgios two break points as he served for the match, but he kept his cool and finished off the world number 19.

Earlier, British wild card Kyle Edmund enjoyed the best win of his promising career as he defeated French world No. 18 Gilles Simon 6-4, 3-6, 6-1.

South Africa-born Edmund is ranked 85, but the 21-year-old, who trained with world No. 2 Andy Murray earlier this year, looks capable of significantly improving on that position after dismantling Simon in the final set.

Simon is the highest-ranked opponent Edmund has ever beaten, trumping his previous-best victory over world No. 43 Martin Klizan in Doha in January.

"It's been great to be able to train with Andy," Edmund said. "I've been very fortunate to do that.

"You speak to him, get tips, what he does on and off the court, seeing how professional he is."

Edmund's reward for shocking the eighth seed is a second-round meeting with France's Paul-Henri Mathieu, who defeated British wild card Daniel Evans 7-6 (10/8), 6-7 (6/8), 6-3.

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