Davis
Cup revamp could 'kill its soul', say Belgians
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[February 27, 2018]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - A proposal to rip up
the Davis Cup format and replace it with a one-week World Cup of
Tennis Finals in a single city risks "killing the soul" of the
historic competition, according to Belgian tennis chief Gijs Kooken.
When it comes to producing the raucous atmospheres which help make
the Davis Cup unique among tennis events, few do it as well as the
Belgians who have reached two of the last three finals, losing on
both occasions.
The final between Belgium and Britain in the Flanders Expo in Ghent
in 2015 was an unforgettable experience for the 13,000 fans who
crammed inside the arena over the three days.
Last year's first-round clash against Germany in Frankfurt and the
final against France in Lille brought thousands of Belgians across
the border to roar on their players.
"Our major concern is that we are risking killing the soul of the
Davis Cup," Kooken told Reuters by telephone.
"The Davis Cup atmosphere is really something unique. The ITF are
focusing on having a bigger event but our concern is that this part
of it (the home and away format) creates big event value."
The International Tennis Federation, in partnership with Barcelona
soccer player Gerard Pique's Kosmos investment company, plan a
single city, 18-nation event to be held over seven days, starting in
November 2019.
A 25-year, $3 billion investment would see cities bid for staging
rights, with Singapore a possible inaugural venue.
While Kooken says change is needed to ensure the participation of
the world's top players - he is skeptical about the radical revamp,
especially the fact that the traditional home and away ties would be
lost.
"I can't imagine that (the ITF) are not thinking about this because
they know what makes Davis Cup different from all the rest," he
said.
"You have to change what is necessary to change and strengthen what
is good or at least keep it. To drop the most unique thing of a
product, that isn't the right way to develop a sport."
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General view during the doubles match between France's Nicolas
Mahut, Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Netherlands' Robin Haase and
Jean-Julien Rojer REUTERS/Emmanuel Foudrot
Royal Belgian Tennis Federation president Andre Stein was quoted in
local media on Monday as saying he was "absolutely against" the
proposals and that other European federations would also vote
against it at the ITF's annual meeting in August.
GAME-CHANGER
Kooken stopped short of echoing those comments but said he thought
it unlikely the plans, described as a game-changer by ITF president
David Haggerty, would pass through easily.
Last year the ITF's board failed to ratify a rule-change that would
have scrapped best-of-five-set matches in favor of best-of-three-set
rubbers.
"Reforms last year were minor compared to this. So I wouldn't expect
for it to be a positive outcome," Kooken said.
"And with the emotions involved it's very hard to predict how people
will react to this."
Ultimately, however, Kooken, said making sure that the leading
players commit to the Davis Cup - something that has not been the
case in recent years - was vital for its future.
"What is certain is that change was needed," he said. "If the
details are presented in a way that top players react positively
toward it then yeah, it can go very quickly the other way. But we as
a federation will discuss it with our players and captains, see how
it fits into their program."
(Reporting by Martyn Herman, editing by Ed Osmond)
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