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France beat Belgium to win Davis Cup as Pouille defeats Darcis in fifth rubber

  • Posted: Nov 26, 2017

France won the Davis Cup for the 10th time as Lucas Pouille beat Belgium’s Steve Darcis in a deciding final match.

The hosts began Sunday’s final day 2-1 up in the best-of-five tie, but David Goffin levelled for Belgium by beating Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 7-6 (7-5) 6-3 6-2.

World number 18 Pouille claimed victory for his country with an emphatic 6-3 6-1 6-0 win over an opponent ranked 76th.

France’s first title since 2001 was celebrated wildly by the 27,000 crowd at the Pierre Mauroy stadium in Lille.

“When Jo lost I was crazy in my head and I was like ‘go on, play your game, try to beat him’. This is a feeling from another world,” Pouille said.

“There are no words needed, just look at the atmosphere and hear the emotion right now.

“I am so proud of my team, we really wanted this trophy. After 16 years, we finally got it, I’m very happy.”

France had reached three finals since their previous Davis Cup success – losing in 2002, 2010 and 2014.

Captain Yannick Noah said victory was the conclusion of “a beautiful adventure”.

He added: “I am so happy for this group, when you don’t win for 16 years there are a lot of things to take care of.

“We were just trying to play like a team. Even though we have a number one with Jo, to have Lucas playing the final game at home and winning us the Davis Cup, it was so beautiful.

“This is when his career is really going to start, he was fantastic.”

France Belgium
18 (won 10, lost eight) Finals Three (won none, lost three)
Yannick Noah Captain Johan Van Herck
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (15) Players (world ranking) David Goffin (7)
Lucas Pouille (18) Steve Darcis (76)
Richard Gasquet (31) Ruben Bemelmans (118)
Pierre-Hugues Herbert (81) Joris de Loore (276)
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Goffin Forces Live 5th Rubber In Davis Cup Final

  • Posted: Nov 26, 2017

Goffin Forces Live 5th Rubber In Davis Cup Final

Goffin puts Belgium within one win of its first Davis Cup title

FRANCE 2, BELGIUM 2
Lille, France (Indoor Hard)

For the second year in a row, there will be a live fifth rubber in the Davis Cup Final.

David Goffin evened the tie for Belgium at 2-2, defeating France’s top-ranked player, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, 7-6(5), 6-3, 6-2, in front of a raucous crowd at Stade Pierre Mauroy in Lille, France.

“I played my best tennis on Sunday,” Goffin said. “It’s always special to play the Davis Cup on Sunday. It’s the best day with the crowd and the atmosphere on the court so it was something unbelievable to play my best tennis.”

The Belgian put his country within one match of winning its first Davis Cup title.

Tsonga dominated the first set, cruising on serve while earning opportunities in almost all of Goffin’s service games. The Frenchman held six break points across three different games in the opening set, but the Belgian found his best tennis while under pressure, especially on his two-handed backhand wing.

And once Goffin sneaked out the first set in a tie-break, all the momentum was on his side. Tsonga’s first-serve percentage dropped from 75 to 53 in the second set, allowing the Belgian to return more aggressively. That gave Goffin his first break point opportunities in the match, one of which he converted to claim a two-set lead.

Tsonga loosened up late in the third set once he was down two breaks, but it was too late. Goffin saved two break points at 4-1 and that was the last hurdle he would face ahead of the finish line, closing out his second win of the weekend with a serve that the Frenchman could not handle.

Goffin, who also helped his country to the Davis Cup Final in 2015, did not lose serve against Tsonga or in his first match of the tie against Lucas Pouille.

The last time that France won the Davis Cup, in 2001 (d. Australia), the tie was also decided in a fifth rubber. The French took a 2-1 lead into Sunday’s play before Lleyton Hewitt forced a decisive fifth rubber, which Nicolas Escude won to claim his country’s ninth trophy in the event.

France’s Pouille is scheduled to play Steve Darcis in the fifth rubber — their first meeting — with the title on the line.

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