No Federer, no Nadal, no Djokovic but plenty at stake in Davis Cup

France are the defending champions and start their campaign at home to the Netherlands while the United States, the record 32-time champions, travel to Serbia.

Published : Feb 01, 2018 09:39 IST

Roger Federer and injured compatriot Stan Wawrinka won’t be part of Switzerland's trip to Kazakhstan.
Roger Federer and injured compatriot Stan Wawrinka won’t be part of Switzerland's trip to Kazakhstan.
lightbox-info

Roger Federer and injured compatriot Stan Wawrinka won’t be part of Switzerland's trip to Kazakhstan.

Just five days after the conclusion of the Australian Open, tennis shifts its attention to the Davis Cup this weekend.

France is the defending champion and starts its campaign at home to the Netherlands while the United States, the record 32-time champion, travels to Serbia.

Five key aspects of the first round ties which take place from Friday to Sunday:

- Stars miss out -

The sport's 'big five' are all missing from this week's first round. Australian Open champion Roger Federer and injured compatriot Stan Wawrinka, key men in Switzerland's 2014 title success, miss the trip to Kazakhstan.

Also nursing injuries are Novak Djokovic, who sits out Serbia's home tie with the US while Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray miss the clash between Spain and Britain.

However, world number three Marin Cilic, the runner-up to Federer in Melbourne, leads Croatia's challenge at home to Canada. Cilic can equal Ivan Ljubicic's record for most Davis Cup match-wins by a Croatian player if he wins three rubbers this weekend. He has a 33-16 win-loss record in doubles and singles.

- Hungary have appetite -

Hungary faces 2017 runners-up Belgium looking to reach the World Group quarterfinals for the first time and record its best Davis Cup result. The Hungarians have won nine of its last 10 ties with successive promotions in 2014-15, rising from Europe/Africa Zone Group III to Group I by 2016, before winning promotion to the World Group last year.

- Mum's the word for Japan's Kiwi -

Ben McLachlan was born in Queenstown, New Zealand but the 25-year-old switched his allegiance in 2017 due to his Japanese mother and is in the squad for the home tie against Italy. McLachlan made his debut in the World Group play-off victory against Brazil in September. With Japan missing the injured Kei Nishikori, McLachlan could have a crucial role having made the semifinals of the doubles at the Australian Open alongside Germany's Jan-Lennard Struff.

- Golden oldie Hewitt -

He may be 36 years old and officially retired but former World No. 1 and Wimbledon and US Open champion Lleyton Hewitt could still feature in the doubles for Australia in its home tie against Germany. Hewitt, the team captain, was rejuvenated at the Australian Open where he made the quarterfinals with compatriot Sam Groth.

- France look to keep perfect record -

Defending champion France host the Netherlands at Albertville boasting a 10-0 record in the tournament over its European rivals since its first meeting 93 years ago. Last year, France equalled Great Britain in third place on the list for most Davis Cup titles after winning the title for the 10th time, beating Belgium 3-2 in the final in Lille.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment