Croatia captain Krajan hails his Davis Cup dream team
Send a link to a friend
[November 26, 2018]
By Martyn Herman
LILLE, France (Reuters) - Croatia
captain Zeljko Krajan hailed his "dream team" after Marin Cilic
sealed a second Davis Cup title for the Balkan nation by beating
France's Lucas Pouille on Sunday.
Just as he was on Friday against Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, the 30-year-old
world number seven was in commanding form to crush Pouille 7-6(3)
6-3 6-3 to give the Croats a winning 3-1 lead.
He did not drop a set in his two singles while Croatian number two
Borna Coric had given the favourites a flying start on Friday with
an easy win over Jeremy Chardy.
Neither Cilic nor Coric dropped serve all weekend as Croatia
emulated the 2005 side which beat Slovakia in the final.
"This is the one of the best teams we've ever had -- it's like a
dream team," Krajan said. "After seven years on the bench (as
captain) it's an honour for me to be here.
"My singles players not only didn't lose a set, they didn't lose
serve in three matches which is an unbelievable achievement and
shows you the quality that we produced."
Victory was especially sweet for Cilic who had bitter memories of
the 2016 final against Argentina to banish.
In that match in Zagreb, he was two sets to the good against Juan
Martin del Potro and required just one more set to give Croatia a
match-winning 3-1 lead.
Del Potro battled back to win in five before Federico Delbonis beat
Ivo Karlovic to give Argentina victory.
"I always sleep well," the 30-year-old Cilic, who made his debut in
2006, said, when asked whether that Del Potro defeat occasionally
kept him awake at night.
[to top of second column] |
Croatia captain Zeljko Krajan reacts during the match between
Croatia's Marin Cilic and France's Lucas Pouille REUTERS/Christian
Hartmann
"I'm just proud of the team today after everything we've been
through. "This is definitely one of the best moments of my career.
There was a lot of pressure but I played a hell of a match today and
deservedly won."
Cilic said the fact that the final was the last in the competition's
current guise added to the joy.
"It's historic," he said. "I have been part of this team since 2006.
I have seen a few generations of players, I have seen a lot of
tennis, a lot of wins, a lot of matches lost too.
"It's amazing to finish a chapter of this kind with the way we
played and the atmosphere that was in the team."
France captain Yannick Noah, who will step down from his third stint
in charge, said his team had been outplayed as they failed in their
bid to win the title two years in succession.
"The guys did the maximum," Noah said. "Sometimes the bar is too
high. That's my feeling.
"We lost to a better team. We did everything we could to be at this
level with the Croatian team. We just went to their locker-room to
congratulate them. I think they're beautiful winners and they
deserve it."
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; editing by Ken Ferris)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|