2002 Davis Cup

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2002 Davis Cup
Details
Duration8 February – 1 December
Edition91st
Teams130
Champion
Winning Nation Russia
2001
2003
A 2003 Russian souvenir sheet commemorating the victory in the final.

The 2002 Davis Cup (also known as the 2002 Davis Cup by BNP Paribas for sponsorship purposes) was the 91st edition of the Davis Cup, the most important tournament between national teams in men's tennis. 130 teams entered the competition, 16 in the World Group, 28 in the Americas Zone, 32 in the Asia/Oceania Zone, and 54 in the Europe/Africa Zone. Kyrgyzstan made its first appearances in the tournament.

BNP Paribas became the Davis Cup's new Title Sponsor from this year's tournament, taking over from NEC, the previous sponsor since the 1981 tournament.[1]

Russia defeated the defending champions France in the final, held at the Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy in Paris, France, on 29 November–1 December, to win their first title.[2][3] This is the only time in the history of the competition that a two-set deficit has been turned around in a live fifth rubber of a Final.[4]

World Group[]

Participating teams

Argentina

Australia

Brazil

Croatia

Czech Republic

France

Germany

Great Britain

Morocco

Netherlands

Russia

Slovakia

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

United States

Draw[]

  First Round
8–10 February
Quarterfinals
5–7 April
Semifinals
20–22 September
Final
29 November–1 December
                                     
Metz, France (indoor clay)
1   France 3  
Pau, France (indoor carpet)
  Netherlands 2  
  1   France 3  
Ostrava, Czech Republic (indoor carpet)
    Czech Republic 1  
  Czech Republic 4
Paris, France (clay)
S   Brazil 1  
  1   France 3  
Zaragoza, Spain (indoor clay)
  S   United States 2  
S   Spain 3  
Houston, TX, United States (grass)
  Morocco 2  
  S   Spain 1
Oklahoma City, OK, United States (indoor hard)
  S   United States 3  
S   United States 5
Paris, France (indoor clay)
  Slovakia 0  
  1   France 2
Moscow, Russia (indoor clay)
  S   Russia 3
   Switzerland 2  
Moscow, Russia (indoor clay)
S   Russia 3  
  S   Russia 4
Birmingham, England (indoor carpet)
  S   Sweden 1  
  Great Britain 2
Moscow, Russia (indoor carpet)
S   Sweden 3  
  S   Russia 3
Zagreb, Croatia (indoor carpet)
    Argentina 2  
  Croatia 4  
Buenos Aires, Argentina (clay)
S   Germany 1  
    Croatia 2
Buenos Aires, Argentina (clay)
    Argentina 3  
  Argentina 5
2   Australia 0  

Final[]

France vs. Russia


France
2
Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy, Paris, France[3]
29 November–1 December 2002
Clay (indoors)

Russia
3
1 2 3 4 5
1 France
Russia
Paul-Henri Mathieu
Marat Safin
4
6
6
3
1
6
4
6
   
2 France
Russia
Sébastien Grosjean
Yevgeny Kafelnikov
77
63
6
3
6
0
     
3 France
Russia
Nicolas Escudé / Fabrice Santoro
Yevgeny Kafelnikov / Marat Safin
6
3
3
6
5
7
6
3
6
4
 
4 France
Russia
Sébastien Grosjean
Marat Safin
3
6
2
6
611
713
     
5 France
Russia
Paul-Henri Mathieu
Mikhail Youzhny
6
3
6
2
3
6
5
7
4
6
 

World Group Qualifying Round[]

Date: 20–22 September

The eight losing teams in the World Group first round ties and eight winners of the Zonal Group I final round ties competed in the World Group Qualifying Round for spots in the 2003 World Group.

Home team Score Visiting team Location Venue Door Surface
 Australia 5–0  India Adelaide Memorial Drive Outdoor Hard
 Zimbabwe 1–4  Belgium Harare City Sports Centre Indoor Hard
 Brazil 4–0  Canada Rio de Janeiro Universidade Veiga de Almeida Outdoor Clay
 Germany 5–0  Venezuela Karlsruhe Europahalle Indoor Hard
 Great Britain 3–2  Thailand Birmingham National Indoor Arena Indoor Carpet
 Finland 1–4  Netherlands Turku Turkuhalli Indoor Carpet
 Slovakia 1–4  Romania Prešov Mestská hala Indoor Carpet
 Morocco 2–3   Switzerland Casablanca Complexe Al Amal Outdoor Clay
  •  Australia,  Brazil,  Germany,  Great Britain,  Netherlands and   Switzerland remain in the World Group in 2003.
  •  Belgium and  Romania are promoted to the World Group in 2003.
  •  Canada,  Finland,  India,  Thailand,  Venezuela and  Zimbabwe remain in Zonal Group I in 2003.
  •  Morocco and  Slovakia are relegated to Zonal Group I in 2003.

Americas Zone[]

Group I[]

Participating Teams
  •  Bahamas
  •  Canada — advanced to World Group Qualifying Round
  •  Chile
  •  Ecuador
  •  Mexico — relegated to Group II in 2003
  •  Venezuela — advanced to World Group Qualifying Round

Group II[]

Participating Teams

Group III[]

Participating Teams

Group IV[]

Participating Teams

Asia/Oceania Zone[]

Group I[]

Participating Teams

Group II[]

Participating Teams

Group III[]

Participating Teams

Group IV[]

Participating Teams

Europe/Africa Zone[]

Group I[]

Participating Teams
  •  Austria
  •  Belarus
  •  Belgium — advanced to World Group Qualifying Round
  •  Finland — advanced to World Group Qualifying Round
  •  Greece — relegated to Group II in 2003
  •  Israel
  •  Italy
  •  Portugal — relegated to Group II in 2003
  •  Romania — advanced to World Group Qualifying Round
  •  Zimbabwe — advanced to World Group Qualifying Round

Group II[]

Participating Teams
  •  Armenia — relegated to Group III in 2003
  •  Bulgaria
  •  Ivory Coast
  •  Denmark
  •  Egypt
  •  Ghana
  •  Hungary — relegated to Group III in 2003
  •  Ireland
  •  Latvia — relegated to Group III in 2003
  •  Luxembourg — promoted to Group I in 2003
  •  Moldova — relegated to Group III in 2003
  •  Norway — promoted to Group I in 2003
  •  Slovenia
  •  South Africa
  •  Ukraine
  •  Yugoslavia

Group III[]

Venue I[]

Participating Teams
  •  Cyprus
  •  Estonia
  •  Macedonia
  •  Madagascar
  •  Mauritius — relegated to Group IV in 2003
  •  Poland — promoted to Group II in 2003
  •  Tunisia — promoted to Group II in 2003

Venue II[]

Participating Teams
  •  Andorra — promoted to Group II in 2003
  •  Bosnia and Herzegovina
  •  Botswana — relegated to Group IV in 2003
  •  Iceland — relegated to Group IV in 2003
  •  Lithuania
  •  Monaco — promoted to Group II in 2003
  •  Namibia
  •  Turkey

Group IV[]

Venue A[]

Participating Teams

Venue II[]

Participating Teams

References[]

General
  • "World Group 2002". DavisCup.com. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
Specific
  1. ^ "Davis Cup History". daviscup.com. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  2. ^ Bud Collins (2010). The Bud Collins History of Tennis (2nd ed.). [New York]: New Chapter Press. pp. 495–496, 505. ISBN 978-0942257700.
  3. ^ a b "France v Russia". daviscup.com.
  4. ^ "From Russia with love of great finals". daviscup.com. Archived from the original on 19 June 2020. Retrieved 19 June 2020.

External links[]

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