Novak Djokovic and Nick Kyrgios enthralled fans on their debut as a doubles team on Monday, riding a massive wave of support to secure a 6-4 6-7(4) (10-8) win over Alexander Erler and Andreas Mies at the Brisbane International.
Djokovic, 37, and Kyrgios, 29, have developed a close friendship during the last couple of years, and their camaraderie was on full display at a packed Pat Rafter Arena as the crowd chanted their names and created an electric atmosphere.
"I want to thank Nick for playing," Djokovic said.
"He said the other day that it should be a pleasure to play with him, and it is. I'm glad to share the court with him on his comeback. I haven't played too many doubles matches ... in the last five years so whatever Nick was saying, I was following."
"We promised that we were going to do this one more time before either he goes or I go, so I'm glad we're still alive," Kyrgios said.
The Australian, returning to tour-level action after more than 18 months out due to knee, foot and wrist injuries, showed no signs of rust as he almost single-handedly won the opening game with his booming serve.
"What a game I played, huh?" Djokovic joked with courtside fans after the Serb hit a volley that clinched it.
Both players revved up the crowd en route to claiming the first set with a break as Djokovic hit a backhand winner around the net and then produced a neat lob that left Kyrgios amazed.
"I was actually surprised that he doubted himself a little bit in some moments," Kyrgios said. "I was like 'brother, you're the greatest of all time, go for it and do what you got to do'."
It was a far cry from when Kyrgios had labelled Djokovic a "tool" and "boneheaded" during the COVID pandemic, before their friendship blossomed.
Kyrgios said he did not want to take anything for granted in his comeback.
"I was just looking around at all the fans, this beautiful stadium. My comeback, this injury has been brutal ... I don't know how many Aussie summers I've got left.
"I was loving the energy. I'm so happy to be back out here. We promised we'd do this one time before either he goes or I go. So I'm glad we're still alive (in the doubles)."
Kyrgios and Djokovic celebrated like schoolboys when the maverick Australian pulled off an audacious shot between his legs midway through the second set but Erler and Mies pulled level in the contest to force a match tiebreak.
With the crowd getting increasingly raucous, Djokovic took them to match point with two big serves before Kyrgios settled it with an ace.
The pair was a wild-card entry into the doubles tournament and next face top-seeded pair Nikola Mektic and Michael Venus.
In the singles event, Australia's Jordan Thompson battled from a set down to stun Italy's Matteo Berrettini 3-6 6-3 6-4 while defending champion Grigor Dimitrov got past qualifier Yannick Hanfmann 7-6(5) 6-3.
Third seed Holger Rune fell 7-5 6-3 against Jiri Lehecka in a big blow to his preparations for the Australian Open that will begin on Jan. 12.
Information from Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.