ATP Cup organisers forced to apologise after anthem gaffe

Australian organisers for the ATP Cup were left red-faced on Friday by playing the wrong national anthem for a player from Moldova.

Published : Jan 03, 2020 08:09 IST , SYDNEY

The national anthem gaffe happened ahead of Alexander Cozbinov's ATP Cup game.
The national anthem gaffe happened ahead of Alexander Cozbinov's ATP Cup game.
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The national anthem gaffe happened ahead of Alexander Cozbinov's ATP Cup game.

Australian organisers for the new tennis team championship were left red-faced on Friday by playing the wrong national anthem for a player from Moldova, a small landlocked country in eastern Europe.

The embarrassing gaffe occurred ahead of the opening singles tie in Sydney of the ATP Cup between Moldova's Alexander Cozbinov and Belgium's Steve Darcis, leaving organisers red-faced.

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“At the start of the Moldova v Belgium match we mistakenly played the wrong national anthem for Moldova,” the ATP admitted.

“We are sincerely sorry and have apologised personally to Team Moldova.”

Tournament officials told AFP the Romanian anthem was played instead.

Not that hard

Cozbinov, who lost in three tough sets, played down the mishap. “I think putting on the wrong anthem for us is not a big deal. But it wasn't that hard to pick the right anthem,” he said.

“Moldova and Romania have the same flag so probably that's why they made a mistake. Hopefully next time it's going to be the right one.”

His opponent Darcis said he was not aware of the mistake at the time. “I didn't know, I was just surprised that they were not so much into it,” he said. “I believe it's bad.”

Moldova, bordered by Romania and Ukraine, was one of the last countries to qualify for the inaugural team event being played in Sydney, Brisbane and Perth.

READ| Five biggest names to miss the inaugural ATP Cup

It is spearheaded by world number 46 Radu Albot, who broke new ground in 2019 by becoming his country's first ATP Tour title winner at Delray Beach.

He is joined by Cozbinov, ranked 818, Egor Matvievici and Dmitrii Baskov in a group that also features Britain, Belgium and Bulgaria.

The ATP Cup has 24 nations split into six groups across the three cities, with eight teams emerging from the round-robin to compete in a knockout phase in Sydney until one country is left standing.

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