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2022 Davis Cup

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2022 Davis Cup
Details
Duration4 March – December 2022
Edition110th
Champion
2023

The 2022 Davis Cup is the 110th edition of the Davis Cup, a tournament between national teams in men's tennis. It is sponsored by Rakuten.[1] The Russian Tennis Federation were the defending champions, but they and Belarus were banned from competing in international events following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[2]

Davis Cup Finals

Date: 14–18 September 2022 (Group stage)
23–27 November 2022 (Knockout stage)
[3]
Venue: Unipol Arena, Bologna, Italy
Emirates Arena, Glasgow, Great Britain
Am Rothenbaum, Hamburg, Germany
Pavelló Municipal Font de Sant Lluís, Valencia, Spain
Martin Carpena Arena, Malaga, Spain
[4][5]
Surface: Indoor Hard

16 nations will take part in the finals. The qualification was as follows:

  • 1 finalists of the previous edition (defending champion Russia was suspended)
  • 1 highest-ranked losing semi-finalist of the previous edition (announced by ITF on 13 March 2022 as Serbia to replace Russia)[6]
  • 2 wild card teams (announced by ITF on 5 December 2021 as Serbia and Great Britain, Canada were later given Serbia’s subsequently vacant wildcard [7]
  • 12 winners of a qualifier round, in March 2022

H = Host Nation, TH = Title-Holder, 2021F = Finalist from the 2021 tournament, 2021SF = Highest-ranked losing semi-finalist from the 2021 tournament, WC = Wild Card

Participating teams

Argentina

Australia

Belgium

Canada (WC)

Croatia (2021F)

France

Germany

Great Britain (WC)

Italy

Kazakhstan

Netherlands

Serbia (2021SF)

South Korea

Spain

Sweden

United States

Seeds

The seedings were based on the Davis Cup Ranking of 7 March 2022.[8]

Qualifying round

Date: 4–5 March 2022[9]

Twenty-six eligible teams were:

  • 16 teams ranked 3rd-18th in the Finals.
  • 8 winning teams from World Group I.
  • 2 winning teams from World Group I Knock-out ties.

Two wild cards for the Finals were selected from these 26 nations.  Serbia and  Great Britain were announced prior to the Qualifiers draw.[9] The remaining 24 nations will compete for 12 spots in the Finals.

The 12 winning teams from the play-offs will play at the Finals and the 12 losing teams will play at the World Group I.

Qualified teams

Home team Score Away team Location Venue Surface
 France [1] 4–0  Ecuador Pau Palais des Sports Hard (i)
 Spain [2] 3–1  Romania Marbella Club de Tenis Puente Romano Clay
 Finland 2–3  Belgium [3] Espoo Espoo Metro Areena Hard (i)
 United States [4] 4–0  Colombia Reno Reno Events Center Hard (i)
 Netherlands 4–0  Canada [5] The Hague Sportcampus Zuiderpark Clay (i)
 Brazil 1–3  Germany [6] Rio de Janeiro Olympic Tennis Centre Clay
 Slovakia 2–3  Italy [7] Bratislava AXA Aréna NTC Hard (i)
 Australia [8] 3–2  Hungary Sydney Ken Rosewall Arena Hard
 Norway 1–3  Kazakhstan [9] Oslo Oslo Tennis Arena Hard (i)
 Sweden [10] 3–2  Japan Helsingborg Helsingborg Arena Hard (i)
 Argentina [11] 4–0  Czech Republic Buenos Aires Lawn Tennis Club Clay
 South Korea 3–1  Austria [12] Seoul Olympic Park Tennis Center Hard (i)

Group stage

Qualified for the Knockout stage
Eliminated

T = Ties, M = Matches, S = Sets, H = Hosts

Group Winner Runner-up Third Fourth
Nation T M S Nation T M S Nation T M S Nation T M S
A  Croatia  Italy (H)  Argentina  Sweden
B  Spain (H)  Canada  Serbia  South Korea
C  France  Germany (H)  Belgium  Australia
D  United States  Great Britain (H)  Kazakhstan  Netherlands

World Group I

Date: 16–18 September 2022

Twenty-four teams participated in the World Group I, in series decided on a home and away basis.

These twenty-four teams were:

  • 11 losing teams from Qualifying round, in March 2022
  • 12 winning teams from World Group I Play-offs, in March 2022
  • 1 highest-ranked losing team from World Group I Play-offs (Uzbekistan)[6]

#: Nations Ranking as of 7 March 2022.[10]

Home team Score Away team Location Venue Surface
 Austria [1]  Pakistan
 Colombia [2]  Turkey
 Israel  Czech Republic [3]
 Uzbekistan  Japan [4]
 Ecuador [5]   Switzerland
 Peru  Chile [6]
 Portugal  Brazil [7]
 Norway  India [8]
 Ukraine  Hungary [9]
 Slovakia [10]  Romania
 Finland [11]  New Zealand
 Bosnia and Herzegovina [12]  Mexico

Qualifying round

Date: 4–5 March 2022

Twenty-four teams will play for twelve spots in the World Group I, in series decided on a home and away basis.

These twenty-four teams are:

  • 2 losing teams from World Group I Knock-out ties.
  • 12 losing teams from World Group I.
  • 8 winning teams from World Group II.
  • 2 winning teams from World Group II Knock-out ties.

The 12 winning teams from the play-offs will play at the World Group I and the 12 losing teams will play at the World Group II.

#: Nations Ranking as of 20 September 2021.[11]

Qualified teams

Home team Score Away team Location Venue Surface
 Chile [1] 4–0  Slovenia Viña del Mar Club Union de Tenis Clay
 India [2] 4–0  Denmark New Delhi Delhi Gymkhana Club Grass
 Uzbekistan [3] 2–3  Turkey Tashkent Olympic Tennis School Hard (i)
 Portugal [4] 4–0  Poland Porto Complexo Municipal de Ténis da Maia Clay (i)
 Tunisia 1–3  Bosnia and Herzegovina [5] Tunis Tennis Club de Tunis Clay
 Israel [6] 3–1  South Africa Ashdod HaKiriya Arena Hard (i)
 New Zealand 3–1  Uruguay [7] Las Vegas (United States) Darling Tennis Center Hard
 Ukraine [8] 3–0  Barbados Antalya (Turkey) Rixos Premium Belek Hard
 Pakistan [9] 3–2  Lithuania Islamabad Pakistan Sports Complex Grass
 Peru [10] 3–1  Bolivia Lima Club Lawn Tennis de La Exposición Clay
  Switzerland 3–1  Lebanon [11] Biel/Bienne Jan Group Arena Hard (i)
 Mexico [12] w/o  Belarus Mexico City Estadio Rafael Osuna Clay

World Group II

Date: 16–18 September 2022

Twenty-four teams participated in the World Group II, in series decided on a home and away basis.

These twenty-four teams were:

  • 10 losing teams from World Group I Play-offs, in March 2022
  • 12 winning teams from World Group II Play-offs, in March 2022
  • 2 highest-ranked losing teams from World Group II Play-offs (China PR and Thailand)[6]

#: Nations Ranking as of 7 March 2022.[10]

Home team Score Away team Location Venue Surface
 Uruguay [1]  China
 Lebanon [2]  Monaco
 Lithuania [3]  Egypt
 Thailand  Bolivia [4]
 Chinese Taipei [5]  Hong Kong
 Slovenia [6]  Estonia
 Tunisia [7]  Greece
 El Salvador  Denmark [8]
 Poland [9]  Indonesia
 Bulgaria  South Africa [10]
 Barbados [11]  Ireland
 Latvia  Dominican Republic [12]

Qualifying round

Date: 4–5 March 2022

Twenty-four teams will play for twelve spots in the World Group II, in series decided on a home and away basis.

These twenty-four teams are:

  • 2 losing teams from World Group II Knock-out ties.
  • 12 losing teams from World Group II.
  • 10 teams from their Group III zone:
    • 3 from Europe
    • 3 from Asia/Oceania,
    • 2 from Americas, and
    • 2 from Africa.

The 12 winning teams from the play-offs will play at the World Group II and the 12 losing teams will play at the Group III of the corresponding continental zone.

#: Nations Ranking as of 20 September 2021.[11]

Qualified teams

Home team Score Away team Location Venue Surface
 China [1] w/o  Ireland
 Dominican Republic [2] 3–0  Vietnam Santo Domingo Centro Nacional de Tenis Parque Del Este Hard
 Thailand [3] 2–3  Latvia Bangkok Lawn Tennis Association of Thailand Hard
 Guatemala 0–4  Chinese Taipei [4] Guatemala City Complejo de Tenis Ing. Juan José Hermosilla Hard
 Indonesia 3–0  Venezuela [5] Jakarta Gelora Bung Karno Sports Complex Hard
 Estonia [6] 4–0  Pacific Oceania Tallinn Forus Tenniscenter Hard (i)
 Egypt [7] 4–1  Cyprus Cairo Gezira Sporting Club Clay
 Greece [8] 3–2  Jamaica Athens Ace Tennis Club Clay (i)
 Monaco 4–0  Morocco [9] Roquebrune-Cap-Martin (France) Monte Carlo Country Club Clay
 Bulgaria [10] 3–1  Paraguay Sofia Sport Hall "Sofia" Hard (i)
 Zimbabwe [11] 1–3  El Salvador Harare Harare Sports Club Hard
 Benin 1–3  Hong Kong [12] Cotonou Stade de l’Amitié Général Mathieu Kérékou Hard

References

  1. ^ "Rakuten to Become New Global Partner for Davis Cup". DavisCup.com. 2019-06-04.
  2. ^ "Joint Statement by the International Governing Bodies of Tennis". ATP Tour. Retrieved March 1, 2022.
  3. ^ "Group stage of Davis Cup Finals moved to September". Daviscup.com. 2022-02-17. Retrieved 2022-02-19.
  4. ^ "Bologna, Glasgow, Hamburg and Malaga announced as hosts of Davis Cup Finals group stage". Daviscup.com. 17 March 2022. Retrieved 17 March 2022.
  5. ^ "Valencia announced as Davis Cup Finals 2022 group stage host city". Daviscup.com. 26 April 2022. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  6. ^ a b c "ITF Board confirms replacements for Russian and Belarusian teams in 2022 Davis Cup". Daviscup.com. 13 March 2022. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  7. ^ "Canada selected as replacement wild card for Davis Cup by Rakuten Finals". 17 March 2022.
  8. ^ "When is the 2022 Davis Cup Finals draw and how it will work". Daviscup.com. 24 March 2022.
  9. ^ a b "Draw announced for 2022 Davis Cup by Rakuten Qualifiers". Daviscup.com. 2021-12-05. Retrieved 2022-01-17.
  10. ^ a b "Davis Cup - Rankings". Daviscup.com. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  11. ^ a b "Davis Cup - Rankings". Daviscup.com. Retrieved 20 September 2021.