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Germany Davis Cup team

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Germany / West Germany
CaptainMichael Kohlmann
ITF ranking6 (28 November 2022)
Colorswhite & black
First year1913
Years played86
Ties played (W–L)238 (155–83)
Years in
World Group
38 (44–35)
Davis Cup titles3 (1988, 1989, 1993)
Runners-up2 (1970, 1985)
Most total winsGottfried von Cramm (82–19)
Most singles winsGottfried von Cramm (58–10)
Most doubles winsGottfried von Cramm (24–9)
Best doubles teamHans-Jürgen Pohmann &
Jürgen Fassbender (13–3)
Most ties playedWilhelm Bungert (43)
Most years playedWilhelm Bungert (14)

The Germany Davis Cup team represents Germany in Davis Cup tennis competition and are governed by the Deutscher Tennis Bund. As East Germany never participated in the Davis Cup, and the Deutscher Tennisbund remained the same organization throughout the century, the West German Davis Cup team is included in this article.

Germany has won the Davis Cup three times (1988, 1989, 1993) and finished as runners-up twice (1970, 1985).

Current team

Players representing Germany at the 2022 Davis Cup
Player Age Win–loss total First
year
Ties Ranking
Singles Doubles Total Singles Doubles
Alexander Zverev 27 8–4 0–1 8–5 2016 6 12 143
Oscar Otte 30 0–4 0–4 2022 4 65 234
Jan-Lennard Struff 34 13–8 4–0 17–8 2015 19 152 139
Tim Pütz 36 12–1 12–1 2017 13 18
Kevin Krawietz 32 11–1 11–1 2019 12 25

Statistics correct as of 25 November 2022. Rankings are as of 21 November 2022.

History

Germany competed in its first Davis Cup in 1913. Since then they have reached five finals.

First final participation in 1970

In 1970, Germany reached the Davis Cup final for the first time. Having defeated Denmark, Egypt, Belgium and the Soviet Union in the European zone they played India and Spain in the so-called interzonal zone, beating both teams. In the final Wilhelm Bungert and Christian Kuhnke played Arthur Ashe and Cliff Richey in singles, and Bob Lutz/Stan Smith in doubles. The German players lost all five matches, all but one in three sets.

Second final participation in 1985

Fifteen years later Germany reached the Davis Cup final for the second time. After close successes against Spain and the United States and a clear victory against Czechoslovakia in the World Group Germany played Sweden at home in Munich. Germany played with Boris Becker and Michael Westphal in the singles and with Becker/Andreas Maurer in the double. After the fourth rubber against Mats Wilander and Stefan Edberg in the singles and Wilander/Joakim Nyström in the double the standings were 2–2. In the decisive fifth rubber Westphal lost to Stefan Edberg in four sets.

First Davis Cup title in 1988

Only three years later Germany reached the Davis Cup final for the third time. After three 5–0 whitewashes against Brazil, Denmark and Yugoslavia Germany once again met Sweden. Now it was Sweden's turn to lose at home. Germany secured its triumph in the third match, the double. Carl-Uwe Steeb and Boris Becker had defeated Mats Wilander and Stefan Edberg, respectively, before the German double consisting of Becker and Eric Jelen defeated Edberg and Anders Järryd in five sets. The fourth match which was shortened to best of three was won by Edberg before Sweden let Germany get its fourth point by a walkover.

Second Davis Cup title in 1989

Germany defeated Indonesia, Czechoslovakia and the United States on the way to their second consecutive final and the final once again was Germany against Sweden. This time the final took place in Stuttgart. Mats Wilander achieved the 1–0 lead for Sweden by defeating Carl-Uwe Steeb in five sets before Boris Becker levelled the standings in a three-set victory against Stefan Edberg. Becker and Eric Jelen defeated the Sweden double of Jan Gunnarsson and Anders Järryd in five sets before Becker secured the second consecutive German Davis Cup title by defeating Mats Wilander in three sets.[4]

Third Davis Cup title in 1993

It took Germany four years to reach the Davis Cup final for the fifth time, and they did so by beating Russia, the Czech Republic and – once again – Sweden. In the final against Australia that took place in Düsseldorf, Germany, Michael Stich defeated Jason Stoltenberg in five sets to mark the first point for Germany. In the second Friday single, Marc-Kevin Goellner lost to Richard Fromberg with a result of 7–9 in the fifth set. Stich and Patrik Kühnen defeated their Australian counterparts Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde in the double, marking the 2–1 for Germany. In the fourth rubber, Michael Stich clearly defeated Richard Fromberg in three sets before Goellner defeated Stoltenberg in the tie-break of the third and last set.

Results

Results until 1980

Germany (1900–1960)

West Germany (1960–1980)

Recent performances

Here is the list of all match-ups since 1981, when the competition started being held in the World Group format.

1980s

1990s

2000s

2010s


Year
Competition Date Location Opponent Score Result
2010 World Group, First round 5–7 March Toulon (FRA)  France 1–4 Loss
World Group Play-offs 17–19 September Stuttgart (GER)  South Africa 5–0 Win
2011 World Group, First round 4–6 March Zagreb (CRO)  Croatia [8] 3–2 Win
World Group, Quarterfinals 8–10 July Stuttgart (GER)  France [2] 1–4 Loss
2012 World Group, First round 10–12 February Bamberg (GER)  Argentina [2] 1–4 Loss
World Group Play-offs 14–16 September Hamburg (GER)  Australia 3–2 Win
2013 World Group, First round 1–3 February Buenos Aires (ARG)  Argentina [3] 0–5 Loss
World Group Play-offs 13–15 September Neu-Ulm (GER)  Brazil 4–1 Win
2014 World Group, First round 31 January–2 February Frankfurt (GER)  Spain [3] 4–1 Win
World Group, Quarterfinals 29–31 March Nancy (FRA)  France [5] 2–3 Loss
2015 World Group, First round 6–8 March Frankfurt (GER)  France [1] 2–3 Loss
World Group Play-offs 18–20 September Santo Domingo (DOM)  Dominican Republic 4–1 Win
2016 World Group, First round 4–6 March Hanover (GER)  Czech Republic [3] 2–3 Loss
World Group Play-offs 16–18 September Berlin (GER)  Poland 3–2 Win
2017 World Group, First round 3–5 February Frankfurt (GER)  Belgium [7] 1–4 Loss
World Group Play-offs 15–17 September Oeiras (POR)  Portugal 3–2 Win
2018 World Group, First round 2–4 February Brisbane (AUS)  Australia [6] 3–1 Win
World Group, Quarterfinals 6–8 April Valencia (ESP)  Spain 2–3 Loss
2019 Qualifying round 1–2 February Frankfurt (GER)  Hungary 5–0 Win
Finals, Group C 20 November Madrid (ESP)  Argentina [3] 3–0 Win
21 November  Chile 2–1 Win
Finals, Quarterfinals 22 November  Great Britain [5] 0–2 Loss

2020s


Year
Competition Date Location Opponent Score Result
2020 Qualifying round 6–7 March Düsseldorf (GER)  Belarus 4–1 Win
2021 Finals, Group F 27 November Innsbruck (AUT)  Serbia [6] 2–1 Win
28 November  Austria 2–1 Win
Finals, Quarterfinals 30 November  Great Britain 2–1 Win
Finals, Semifinals 4 December Madrid (ESP)  Russia 1–2 Loss
2022 Qualifying round 4–5 March Rio de Janeiro (BRA)  Brazil 3–1 Win
Finals, Group C 14 September Hamburg (GER)  France 2–1 Win
16 September  Belgium 2–1 Win
18 September  Australia 2–1 Win
Finals, Quarterfinals 24 November Málaga (ESP)  Canada 1–2 Loss
2023 Qualifying round 3–4 February Trier (GER)   Switzerland Pending

Team captains

from 1985 on

Statistics

Player records

Most total wins overall
# Player Years Win–loss Win % Ties
played
Singles Doubles Total
1 Gottfried von Cramm 1932–1953 58–10 24–9 82–19 81% 37
2 Wilhelm Bungert 1958–1971 52–27 14–9 66–36 65% 43
3 Boris Becker 1985–1999 38–30 16–9 54–12 82% 28
4 Christian Kuhnke 1960–1972 35–15 16–8 51–23 69% 32
5 Henner Henkel 1935–1939 33–13 16–4 49–17 74% 27
6 Ingo Buding 1961–1970 26–11 10–5 36–16 69% 26
7 Michael Stich 1990–1996 21–90 14–2 35–11 76% 17
8 Philipp Kohlschreiber 2007–2020 20–14 04–3 24–17 59% 23
9 Tommy Haas 1998–2014 19–70 04–2 23–90 72% 18
10 Daniel Prenn 1928–1932 17–50 04–5 21–10 68% 14
Most total wins since 1981
# Player Years Win–loss Win % Ties
played
Singles Doubles Total
1 Boris Becker 1985–1999 38–30 16–9 54–12 82% 28
2 Michael Stich 1990–1996 21–90 14–2 35–11 76% 17
3 Philipp Kohlschreiber 2007–2020 20–14 04–3 24–17 59% 23
4 Tommy Haas 1998–2014 19–70 04–2 23–90 72% 18
5 Eric Jelen 1986–1992 8–4 12–4 20–80 71% 16
6 Jan-Lennard Struff 2015–2022 13–80 04–0 17–80 68% 19
7 Tim Pütz 2017–2022 0–0 12–1 12–10 92% 13
Michael Westphal 1982–1986 12–70 00–0 12–70 63% 10
Marc-Kevin Goellner 1993–2001 8–6 04–3 12–90 57% 12
Nicolas Kiefer 1998–2009 10–11 02–3 12–14 46% 15
  • Players who are still active are shown in boldface.

Team records

Statistics since 1981, as of end of 2022 Davis Cup Finals.

Results
  • Champion: 3 times
  • Runner-up: 1 time
  • Lost in Semifinals: 5 times
  • Lost in Quarterfinals: 12 times
  • Lost in First Round: 17 times
  • Not in World Group/Finals: 3 times
Records by decade
  • 1981–1989: 18–7 (72%)
  • 1990–1999: 16–9 (64%)
  • 2000–2009: 11–10 (52%)
  • 2010–2019: 12–10 (55%)
  • 2020–0000: 8–2 (80%)
Records by ground
  • Home (54 ties): 40–14 (74%)
  • Away (42 ties): 21–21 (50%)
  • Neutral (6 ties): 4–3 (57%)
  • Total: (103 ties): 65–38 (63%)

Head-to-head records

Statistics since 1981, as of end of 2022 Davis Cup Finals.

  1. ^ a b includes  Czechoslovakia (2–1)

See also

References

  1. ^ "United States 5:0 Germany F.R." Daviscup.com.
  2. ^ "Germany F.R. 2:3 Sweden". Daviscup.com.
  3. ^ "Sweden 1:4 Germany F.R." Daviscup.com.
  4. ^ "Germany F.R. 3:2 Sweden". Daviscup.com.
  5. ^ "December 17, 1989: Boris Becker secures Davis Cup title defense for Germany". Tennis World USA.
  6. ^ "Germany 4:1 Australia". Daviscup.com.

External links