2003 Davis Cup

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2003 Davis Cup
Details
Duration7 February – 30 November
Edition92nd
Teams135
Champion
Winning Nation Australia
2002
2004

The 2003 Davis Cup was the 92nd edition of the most important tournament between nations in men's tennis. A total of 135 nations participated in the tournament. In the final, Australia defeated Spain at Rod Laver Arena in Melbourne, Australia, on 28–30 November, giving Australia their 28th title.[1]

World Group[]

Participating Teams

Argentina

Australia

Belgium

Brazil

Croatia

Czech Republic

France

Germany

Great Britain

Netherlands

Romania

Russia

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

United States

Draw[]

  First Round
7–9 February
Quarterfinals
4–6 April
Semifinals
19–21 September
Final
28–30 November
                                     
Bucharest, Romania (indoor carpet)
S   France 4  
Toulouse, France (indoor hard)
  Romania 1  
  S   France 2  
Arnhem, Netherlands (indoor carpet)
     Switzerland 3  
S   Netherlands 2
Melbourne, Australia (hard)
   Switzerland 3  
     Switzerland 2  
Sydney, Australia (clay)
  S   Australia 3  
S   Australia 4  
Malmö, Sweden (indoor hard)
  Great Britain 1  
  S   Australia 5
Helsingborg, Sweden (indoor carpet)
  S   Sweden 0  
S   Sweden 3
Melbourne, Australia (grass)
  Brazil 2  
  S   Australia 3
Zagreb, Croatia (indoor carpet)
  S   Spain 1
  Croatia 4  
Valencia, Spain (clay)
S   United States 1  
    Croatia 0
Seville, Spain (clay)
  S   Spain 5  
  Belgium 0
Málaga, Spain (clay)
S   Spain 5  
  S   Spain 3
Buenos Aires, Argentina (clay)
  S   Argentina 2  
  Germany 0  
Buenos Aires, Argentina (clay)
S   Argentina 5  
  S   Argentina 5
Ostrava, Czech Republic (indoor clay)
  S   Russia 0  
  Czech Republic 2
S   Russia 3  

First round losers compete in Play-off ties with Zonal Group I Qualifiers.

Final[]


Australia
3
Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne, Australia[2]
28–30 November 2003
Grass

Spain
1
1 2 3 4 5
1 Australia
Spain
Lleyton Hewitt
Juan Carlos Ferrero
3
6
6
3
3
6
77
60
6
2
 
2 Australia
Spain
Mark Philippoussis
Carlos Moyà
4
6
4
6
6
4
64
77
   
3 Australia
Spain
Wayne Arthurs / Todd Woodbridge
Àlex Corretja / Feliciano López
6
3
6
1
6
3
     
4 Australia
Spain
Mark Philippoussis
Juan Carlos Ferrero
7
5
6
3
1
6
2
6
6
0
 
5 Australia
Spain
Lleyton Hewitt
Carlos Moyà
          not
played

World Group Play-offs[]

Date: 19–21 September

Home team Score Visiting team Location Venue Door Surface
 Austria 3–2  Belgium Pörtschach Werzer Arena Pörtschach Outdoor Clay
 Canada 3–2  Brazil Calgary Stampede Corral Indoor Carpet
 Thailand 1–4  Czech Republic Bangkok Impact, Muang Thong Thani Indoor Hard
 Germany 2–3  Belarus Sundern TC Blau-Weiss Sundern Outdoor Clay
 Morocco 3–2  Great Britain Casablanca Complex Sportif Al Amal Outdoor Clay
 Netherlands 5–0  India Zwolle IJsselhallen Indoor Hard
 Ecuador 2–3  Romania Quito Quito Tenis Y Golf Club Outdoor Clay
 Slovakia 2–3  United States Bratislava National Tennis Centre Outdoor Clay
  •  Czech Republic,  Netherlands,  Romania and  United States will remain in the World Group in 2004.
  •  Austria,  Belarus,  Canada and  Morocco are promoted to the World Group in 2004.
  •  Ecuador,  India,  Slovakia and  Thailand will remain in Zonal Group I in 2004.
  •  Belgium,  Brazil,  Germany and  Great Britain are relegated to Zonal Group I in 2004.

Americas Zone[]

Group I[]

Participating Teams
  •  Bahamas — relegated to Group II in 2004
  •  Canada — advanced to World Group Qualifying Round
  •  Chile
  •  Ecuador — advanced to World Group Qualifying Round
  •  Peru
  •  Venezuela

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
  •  Bangladesh
  •  Brunei
  •  Myanmar
  •  Oman — promoted to Group III in 2004
  •  Saudi Arabia
  •  Singapore
  •  Sri Lanka
  •  Vietnam — promoted to Group III in 2004

Europe/Africa Zone[]

Group I[]

Participating Teams
  •  Austria — advanced to World Group Qualifying Round
  •  Belarus — advanced to World Group Qualifying Round
  •  Finland
  •  Israel
  •  Italy — relegated to Group II in 2004
  •  Luxembourg
  •  Morocco — advanced to World Group Qualifying Round
  •  Norway — relegated to Group II in 2004
  •  Slovakia — advanced to World Group Qualifying Round
  •  Zimbabwe

Group II[]

Participating Teams
  •  Andorra — relegated to Group III in 2004
  •  Bulgaria
  •  Ivory Coast — relegated to Group III in 2004
  •  Denmark
  •  Egypt
  •  Ghana — relegated to Group III in 2004
  •  Greece — promoted to Group I in 2004
  •  Ireland
  •  Monaco — relegated to Group III in 2004
  •  Poland
  •  Portugal
  •  Slovenia
  •  South Africa — promoted to Group I in 2004
  •  Tunisia
  •  Ukraine
  •  FR Yugoslavia

Group III[]

Venue I[]

Participating Teams
  •  Algeria — promoted to Group II in 2004
  •  Angola — relegated to Group IV in 2004
  •  Armenia — relegated to Group IV in 2004
  •  Estonia
  •  Hungary — promoted to Group II in 2004
  •  Lithuania
  •  Madagascar
  •  Namibia

Venue II[]

Participating Teams
  •  Azerbaijan
  •  Bosnia and Herzegovina — relegated to Group IV in 2004
  •  Cyprus
  •  Georgia — promoted to Group II in 2004
  •  Latvia — promoted to Group II in 2004
  •  Macedonia
  •  Moldova — relegated to Group IV in 2004
  •  Turkey

Group IV[]

Venue I[]

Participating Teams
  •  Iceland — promoted to Group III in 2004
  •  Kenya — promoted to Group III in 2004
  •  Malta
  •  Mauritius
  •  Rwanda
  •  San Marino
  •  Zambia

Venue II[]

Participating Teams

References[]

  1. ^ "Davis Cup Result Archives". Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  2. ^ "Australia v Spain". daviscup.com.
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