Davis Cup: Canada, Russia, Belgium early winners

Published by Reuters

Denis Shapovalov celebrates during his decisive win over Matteo Berrettini to hand Canada victory over Italy in the group stages of the Davis Cup Finals in Madrid. (Getty Images)
Canada, Russia and Belgium win first up as the new-look Davis Cup Finals kick off in Monday in Madrid.

Gerard Pique boldly describes the inaugural edition of the revamped Davis Cup as a ‘new era for tennis’ but amidst all the glitz and glamour in Madrid’s La Caja Majica there was only gloom for reigning champions Croatia on Monday.

Without their injured talisman Marin Cilic and with the team in upheaval after captain Zeljko Krajan was axed two days before their opening tie against Russia, Borna Gojo lost to Andrey Rublev before Borna Coric was edged out by Karen Khachanov.

Khachanov and Rublev later combined to win the doubles in straight sets over Ivan Dodig and Nikola Mektic to complete a clean sweep for Russia.

To make matters worse, the tie took place in a cavernous 12,000-seat arena with little of the fabled Davis Cup atmosphere Croatia could have relied on in either Zagreb or Split.

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Organisers must get through 25 ties featuring two singles and a doubles rubber in seven days so two smaller stadium courts are also used at the venue and it was on those where a more authentic Davis Cup sound could be heard on Monday.

It was not quite Liege, but around 100 Belgian fans roared on Steve Darcis, the man they call Mr Davis Cup, and David Goffin to victory over a well-supported Colombia team.

Over on Court Two, Canada’s fans celebrated every point with a song as Vasek Pospisil beat Italy’s Fabio Fognini before 20-year-old Denis Shapovalov stunned world No.8 Matteo Berrettini to spark a red and white party.

To rub salt into Croatia’s wounds, the defending champions will almost certainly need to beat Rafael Nadal’s Spain in their second Group B tie on Wednesday to reach the knockout phase.

It was a bit different 12 months ago when Cilic fired his nation to victory over France in a deafening din in Lille’s soccer stadium.

That was the last final before radical changes to the historic team event, voted in by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) in 2018 in association with Barcelona soccer player Pique’s investment firm Kosmos, came into effect.

The ITF has come under fire for meddling with the unique “home and away” format and replacing it with a soccer World Cup-style event featuring 18 nations, in one city, battling over seven days to be crowned champions.

Kosmos are pumping $3 billion into the ITF’s coffers over 25 years and no expense was spared on Monday’s lavish opening ceremony which featured a spectacular light show, dancers, drummers, violinists and an ear-pummelling DJ set.

The trouble was at 2pm on a Monday afternoon in Madrid there were not many inside to watch the special effects.

A band of Croatian fans, complete with a brass band belting out “Viva Espana”, whipped up some noise in a cavernous 12,000-seat arena that looked no more than half full when debutant Gojo and Rublev began the serious business.

But it went flat as Rublev won easily 6-3 6-3 before Coric played superbly to win the first set against world number 17 Khachanov but ended up losing 6-7 6-4 6-4.

The new format features 12 nations who came through the traditional February qualifying ties, last year’s four semi-finalists and wildcards Britain and Argentina.

Despite some glitches, however, it was an encouraging opening day for Pique’s brave new world and Tuesday’s evening tie between Spain and Russia, one of six on a packed schedule, might see the roof come off the Magic Box.

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