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Revision as of 20:19, 3 April 2017

Croatia
CaptainŽeljko Krajan
ITF ranking3
Highest ITF ranking1 ()
ColorsRed and white
First year1993
Years played25
Ties played (W–L)55 (32–23)
Years in
World Group
15 (14–14)
Davis Cup titles1 (2005)
Runners-up1 (2016)
Most total winsIvan Ljubičić (36–19)
Most singles winsIvan Ljubičić (23–13)
Most doubles winsGoran Ivanišević (13–5)
Ivan Ljubičić (13–6)
Best doubles teamLjubičić & Ivanišević (6–0)
Ljubičić & Ančić (6–1)
Most ties playedIvan Ljubičić (22)
Most years playedIvan Ljubičić (11)

The Croatia Davis Cup team represents Croatia in Davis Cup tennis competition and is governed by the Croatian Tennis Association. It is captained by Željko Krajan.

Croatia won the Davis Cup once, in 2005, and was runner-up in in 2016.

History

Croatia competed in its first Davis Cup in 1993 in Europe/Africa Group I semifinals beating Zimbabwe 3-2. In 1994 Croatia beat Portugal 4-0 in qualification round thus ensuring its first time appearance in World Group in 1995. Croatia lost in its debut from Germany and failed to qualify in the World Group again until 2002 where they beat Germany and earned its first quarterfinals. In 2005 Croatia won its first Davis Cup over Slovakia as the first unseeded nation to win the title. Croatia reached semifinals in 2009 but lost to Czech Republic 4-1. In 2016 Croatia reached the finals for the second time, again as unseeded nation, but lost to Argentina.

Current team

The following players were called up for the 2017 Davis Cup World Group first round match against Spain in February 2017.

Player Singles
ATP Rank
Doubles
ATP Rank
First year
played
Total
Win/Loss
Singles
Win/Loss
Doubles
Win/Loss
Franko Škugor 223 111 2015 2–2 0–1 2–1
Ante Pavić 486 349 0–0 0–0 0–0
Marin Draganja 114 2014 1–3 0–1 1–2
Nikola Mektić 319 65 2011 1–0 1–0 0–0

Players

Key
§
Still active for the national team[nb 1]
Winners at the 2005 Davis Cup[nb 2]
*
Still playing active tennis
Player W-L
(Total)
W-L
(Singles)
W-L
(Doubles)
Ties Career
Mario Ančić 21–13 13–11 8–2 18 1999–2009
Ivan Beroš 1–0 1–0 0–0 1 1999
Ivan Cerović 0–1 0–1 0–0 1 2006
Marin Čilić § 30–16 22–10 8–6 20 2006–
Borna Ćorić § 5–6 5–6 0–0 8 2013–
Mate Delić § 1–4 1–4 0–0 3 2014–
Ivan Dodig § 9–11 2–7 7–4 12 2010–
Marin Draganja § 2–3 0–1 2–2 5 2014–
Saša Hiršzon 11–12 6–8 5–4 9 1994–1998
Goran Ivanišević 33–11 20–6 13–5 18 1993–2003
Roko Karanušić 2–6 2–5 0–1 6 2005–2009
Ivo Karlović 13–14 9–10 4–4 15 2000–2016
Željko Krajan 1–2 1–2 0–0 3 1998–1999
Ivan Ljubičić 36–19 23–13 13–6 22 1998–2010
Nikola Mektić § 2–1 1–1 1–0 2 2011–
Goran Orešić 1–1 1–1 0–0 2 1996
Ante Pavić § 0–1 0–1 0–0 1 2017–
Mate Pavić * 0–3 0–1 0–2 2 2013–2014
Goran Prpić 1–5 1–3 0–2 2 1993
Igor Šarić 2–0 2–0 0–0 2 1994–1996
Franko Škugor § 3–3 1–2 2–1 4 2015–
Saša Tuksar 0–2 0–2 0–0 2 2004–2006
Ivan Vajda 0–1 0–1 0–0 1 2001
Antonio Veić * 1–2 1–2 0–0 3 2010–2012
Lovro Zovko 6–9 5–2 1–7 10 1998–2009

Managers

Croatian Davis Cup team in 2011
Name Tenure Ties Won Lost Win % Best Result
Croatia Bruno Orešar 1993 2 1 1 50 1993 World Group, Qualifying round
Croatia Goran Prpić 1994 1 1 0 100 1994 Europe/Africa Group I, Semifinals
Croatia Željko Franulović 1994–1997 7 3 4 42.9 1995 World Group, First round
Croatia Goran Prpić 1998–2000 7 4 3 57.1 1999 Europe/Africa Group I, Quarterfinals
Croatia Nikola Pilić 2001–2005 12 9 3 75 2005 Champions
Croatia Ivan Ljubičić 2006 2 1 1 50 2006 World Group, Quarterfinals
Croatia Goran Prpić 2007–2011 11 6 5 54.6 2009 World Group, Semifinals
Croatia Željko Krajan 2012– 13 7 6 53.8 2016 World Group, Finals
Totals 55 32 23 58.2

Davis Cup finals

Edition Rounds/Opponents Results
2005 1R:  United States QF:  Romania SF:  Russia F:  Slovakia 1R: 3–2 QF: 4–1 SF: 3–2 F: 3–2
2016 1R:  Belgium QF:  United States SF:  France F:  Argentina 1R: 3–2 QF: 3–2 SF: 3–2 F: 2–3

List of matches

Here is the list of all match-ups since 1993, when Croatia started competing as a separate nation.

1990s

2000s

2010s

Year Competition Date Location Opponent Score Result
2010 World Group, First round 5–7 Mar Varaždin (CRO)  Ecuador 5–0 Win
World Group, Quarterfinals 9–11 Jul Split (CRO)  Serbia 1–4 Loss
2011 World Group, First round 4–6 Mar Zagreb (CRO)  Germany 2–3 Loss
World Group, Relegation play-off 16–18 Sep Potchefstroom (RSA)  South Africa 4–1 Win
2012 World Group, First round 10–12 Feb Miki (JPN)  Japan 3–2 Win
World Group, Quarterfinals 6–8 Apr Buenos Aires (ARG)  Argentina 1–4 Loss
2013 World Group, First round 1–3 Feb Turin (ITA)  Italy 2–3 Loss
World Group, Relegation play-off 13–15 Sep Umag (CRO)  Great Britain 1–4 Loss
2014 Europe/Africa Group I, Second round 4–6 Apr Warsaw (POL)  Poland 3–1 Win
World Group, Promotion play-off 12–14 Sep Amsterdam (NED)  Netherlands 3–2 Win
2015 World Group, First round 6–8 Mar Kraljevo (SRB)  Serbia 0–5 Loss
World Group, Relegation play-off 18–20 Sep Florianópolis (BRA)  Brazil 3–1 Win
2016 World Group, First round 4–6 Mar Liège (BEL)  Belgium 3–2 Win
World Group, Quarterfinals 15–17 Jul Beaverton (USA)  United States 3–2 Win
World Group, Semifinals 16–18 Sep Zadar (CRO)  France 3–2 Win
World Group, Finals 25–27 Nov Zagreb (CRO)  Argentina 2–3 Runner-up
2017 World Group, First Round 3–5 Feb Osijek (CRO)  Spain 2–3 Loss
World Group, Relegation play-off 15–17 Sep TBD TBD TBD TBD

Statistics

Last updated: Croatia - Spain ; 5 February 2017

Record
  • Champion: 1 time (1 time Away)
  • Runner-up: 1 time
  • Lost in Semifinals: 1 time
  • Lost in Quarterfinals: 5 times
  • Lost in First Round: 5 times
  • Not in World Group: 8 times
  • Total: 32–22 (59.3%)

Notes

  1. ^ Players considered active are the ones who have been called up for the national team in the last 12 months.
  2. ^ Goran Ivanišević and Ivo Karlović were called up for the finals but did not participate.

References

See also