The 22-time grand slam winner had impressed while disposing of Dominic Thiem and Jason Kubler to reach the quarter-finals.
His fingers are now crossed that the injury concern amounts to nothing and that he’ll line up at the Australian Open from next Sunday.
But he admitted his fear, given the proximity of the soreness to the hip that was operated on in June and which forced him off the ATP Tour after an early exit at Melbourne Park last year.
”Yeah, it is a very similar place to what happened last year, but different,” he said post-match. ”I feel more muscle, last year was tendon.
”For sure is not the same like last year at all because when it happened last year, I felt something drastic immediately.
”Today, I didn’t feel anything. The only problem is because the place is the same, you are a little bit more scared than usual.
”I hope is not important and I hope to have the chance to be practising next week and to play Melbourne. Honestly, I am not 100 per cent sure of anything now.”
He said, ideally, it was just fatigue after back-to-back matches, a tip of the cap to 29-year-old Thompson who is set to return to the world’s top 50 thanks to this Brisbane campaign.
”From this perspective, you don’t know all the information that I have,” he told reporters.
”The only thing that probably you see is I have been playing very well the last two matches. It’s true, I have been playing well.
”A lot of things can be happening in a body like my body after a year without playing tennis.
”So hopefully it is just that, just a muscle that is supercharged ... if that’s the thing, everything perfect.”
- AAP