Germany end Serbia's ATP Cup defence to reach semis
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[February 05, 2021]
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Alexander Zverev
shrugged off a tight loss to Novak Djokovic to end Serbia's ATP Cup
title defence with victory in the doubles as Germany advanced to the
semi-finals of the team-based event in Melbourne on Friday.
Germany will meet Russia in the last four, with Spain to take on
Italy.
Zverev, beaten 6-7(3) 6-2 7-5 in a high-quality match by world
number one Djokovic earlier on Friday, stepped up to partner Jan-Lennard
Struff to a rousing 7-6(4) 5-7 (10-7) victory over Djokovic and
Nikola Cacic on Rod Laver Arena.
"I was quite frustrated with how the singles ended in a way," Zverev
said on court. "Still got to give myself some time.
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"We played well, both of us," he added of his doubles match with
Struff, who beat Dusan Lajovic 3-6 6-3 6-4 in the opening singles
rubber.
Djokovic's 11-match winning streak in the team tournament was
broken, and he will have no more match practice before his
Australian Open title defence.
"I am upset that we lost, that's all I can say, I'm not thinking
about the Australian Open or anything else," said Djokovic.
"It’s unfortunate we lost the tie. That's what this competition is
all about. It's about the team, not about winning one match, (a)
singles match. We'll try another time."
A year after crashing out of the inaugural ATP Cup with a huge tally
of double-faults, Zverev's serving demons returned under pressure
against Djokovic in the singles and again in the doubles on Friday.
He was broken at 5-5 in the second set of the doubles after two
double-faults but nailed his serves when Germany grabbed match
points in the super tiebreak.
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Serbia's Novak Djokovic
celebrates winning his group stage match against Germany's Alexander
Zverev REUTERS/Jaimi Joy
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Djokovic consoled himself that he had an excellent warmup against
Zverev in the singles.
"I thought it was a great match. I thought we both played well ...
He definitely had a big serving match. It was so difficult to play
against him today," he said.
With Rafa Nadal still sidelined with a back problem, Pablo Carrena
Busta guided a depleted Spain into the last four by claiming a 6-3
6-4 win against Greece's Michail Pervolarakis at John Cain Arena.
Though eliminated, Greece ended up winning the tie 2-1, with
Stefanos Tsitsipas easing past Roberto Bautista Agut 7-5 7-5.
Spain retired after losing the opening game of the doubles, handing
Greece the win.
In a dead rubber between Austria and France in the evening, world
number three Dominic Thiem's hopes of getting some match practice
were cut short when his French opponent, Benoit Paire, retired while
trailing 6-1.
(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne, Additional reporting by
Sudipto Ganguly in Mumbai; Editing by Stephen Coates/Peter
Rutherford/Toby Davis)
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