Jim Courier laments as drums beat retreat from Davis Cup history

Fans banging drums and blowing trumpets for hours on end. Colorful costumes. Chants more reminiscent of football games than tennis matches.
Croatian fans during the Davis Cup semi-final against the USA. Picture: Darko Bandic/APCroatian fans during the Davis Cup semi-final against the USA. Picture: Darko Bandic/AP
Croatian fans during the Davis Cup semi-final against the USA. Picture: Darko Bandic/AP

Plus, a series of marathon matches featuring constant momentum changes and evolving drama.

The atmosphere at the best-of-five semi-final between Croatia and the United States over the weekend was a firm reminder of what makes the current Davis Cup format so attractive.

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“Very few matches players will ever play in their career have more pressure than that,” said USA captain Jim Courier after Croatia’s Borna Coric ground out a five-set win over Davis Cup rookie Frances Tiafoe in the fifth and deciding match on Sunday .

“Grand Slam final maybe is the only thing that comes close to touching that,” Courier added. “That’s going to be a boost for Frances long-term. He knows he can win in that environment.”

Yet that environment won’t be around at this stage in 2019.

Beginning next year, the top team event in men’s tennis – which started in 1900 – will be decided with a season-ending, 18-team tournament at a 
neutral site.

The new format is designed to make it easier for top players such as Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic to include the Davis Cup in their busy schedules.

The 21-year-old Coric called his victory over Tiafoe “the most special moment of my whole life – by far,” but even he conceded that playing five sets of emotional tennis takes too much of a toll.

“From the players point of view I think it’s going to help us,” Coric said.

“It’s going to give us a little bit more time to recover after the tournaments. Because I know after I play a big tie, when I play two matches, especially, the next week I cannot play and I’m very tired so I cannot practice too much also.

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“But on a different point of view, I’m going to miss this for sure, because this is really something special, especially in tennis,” Coric added.

“We don’t get this a lot. We don’t play for a team... but I think we’re going to see in 
a couple of years it’s a good decision.”

In a rematch of this year’s football World Cup final, Croatia will visit defending champion France for the Davis Cup final in Lille from 23-25 November.

Under the new format, teams will still play traditional home-and-away series during a week in February to qualify for the main championship in November. That replacesg the current forma, with ties played over four weekends throughout the year. Players will compete for what the International Tennis Federation has said will rival Grand Slam prize money.

“The No. 1 thing – if I play next year – I would miss is playing those home ties in front of your home fans,” American doubles specialist Mike Bryan said. “Hearing the USA chants. It’s just the excitement and the energy that that brings. It’s unlike any match on tour. Scheduling-wise and from a fan’s perspective it may be easier to follow and easier on the players long-term. That’s the only downside for me.”

Next year, the finalists will be placed into six, three-team groups for round-robin play, involving two singles matches and one doubles, all best-of-three sets – instead of the current best-of-five format featuring four singles matches and one doubles. The winners, along with the next two teams with the best records, will advance to the single-elimination quarterfinals.

The first championship will be held on an indoor hardcourt from Nov. 18-24, 2019, in either Madrid or Lille, France.

The 40-year-old Bryan came out of Davis Cup retirement and helped spark a U.S. comeback from 0-2 down by teaming with Ryan Harrison in a doubles victory Saturday that was decided in a fifth-set tiebreaker over nearly five hours.

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“These are really fun moments when you’re playing on the road,” Bryan said. “It’s exciting to battle a crowd like that. It’s going to be different. It’s going to be kind of a neutral place to play.”

Courier hopes Fed Cup, the women’s version of the Davis Cup, joins in at some point, so men’s and women’s teams can compete in the same location.

“I think that’s the best presentation of our sport,” Courier said. “We see in the Grand Slams how much attention they get, because we have the men and the women. I think it would be wise for the ITF to look into that down the road once they get their sea legs so to speak with the new format.”

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