2001 Davis Cup

The 2001 Davis Cup (also known as the 2001 Davis Cup by NEC for sponsorship purposes) was the 90th edition of the Davis Cup, the most important tournament between national teams in men's tennis. 139 teams entered the competition, 16 in the World Group, 29 in the Americas Zone, 32 in the Asia/Oceania Zone, and 62 in the Europe/Africa Zone. Angola, Burkina Faso, Gabon, Mali and Rwanda made their first appearances in the tournament.

2001 Davis Cup
Details
Duration9 February – 2 December 2001
Edition90th
Teams139
Champion
Winning Nation France
2000
2002

France defeated Australia in the final, held at the Rod Laver Arena in Melbourne Park, Melbourne, Australia, on 30 November–2 December, to win their 9th title and their first since 1996. The French team achieved victory despite not playing a single match on home soil.[1][2]

World Group

Participating teams

Australia

Belgium

Brazil

Czech Republic

Ecuador

France

Germany

Morocco

Netherlands

Romania

Russia

Slovakia

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

United States

Draw

First round
9–11 February
Quarterfinals
6–8 April
Semifinals
21–23 September
Final
30 November–2 December
Perth, Australia (grass)
S Australia4
Florianópolis, Brazil (clay)
 Ecuador1
S Australia3
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (clay)
S Brazil1
S Brazil4
Sydney, Australia (hard)
 Morocco1
S Australia4
Helsingborg, Sweden (indoor carpet)
S Sweden1
S Sweden3
Malmö, Sweden (indoor hard)
 Czech Republic2
S Sweden4
Bratislava, Slovakia (indoor hard)
S Russia1
S Russia3
Melbourne, Australia (grass)
 Slovakia2
S Australia2
Ghent, Belgium (indoor clay)
S France3
 Belgium0
Neuchâtel, Switzerland (indoor carpet)
S France5
S France3
Basel, Switzerland (indoor hard)
  Switzerland2
  Switzerland3
Rotterdam, Netherlands (indoor carpet)
S United States2
S France3
Braunschweig, Germany (indoor carpet)
 Netherlands2
 Romania2
's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands (indoor carpet)
S Germany3
S Germany1
Eindhoven, Netherlands (indoor carpet)
 Netherlands4
 Netherlands4
S Spain1

Final

Australia vs. France


Australia
2
Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne Park, Melbourne, Australia[2]
30 November–2 December 2001
Grass

France
3
1 2 3 4 5
1 Australia
France
Lleyton Hewitt
Nicolas Escudé
6
4
3
6
6
3
3
6
4
6
 
2 Australia
France
Pat Rafter
Sébastien Grosjean
6
3
78
66
7
5
     
3 Australia
France
Lleyton Hewitt / Pat Rafter
Cédric Pioline / Fabrice Santoro
6
2
3
6
65
77
1
6
   
4 Australia
France
Lleyton Hewitt
Sébastien Grosjean
6
3
6
2
6
3
     
5 Australia
France
Wayne Arthurs
Nicolas Escudé
63
77
77
65
3
6
3
6
   

World Group qualifying round

Date: 21–23 September; 12–14 October

The eight losing teams in the World Group first round ties and eight winners of the Zonal Group I final round ties competed in the World Group qualifying round for spots in the 2002 World Group.

Home teamScoreVisiting teamLocationVenueDoorSurface
 Argentina5–0 BelarusCórdobaCórdoba Lawn Tennis ClubOutdoorClay
 Belgium2–3 MoroccoLiègeCountry Hall LiègeIndoorCarpet
 Czech Republic3–2 RomaniaProstějovSports HallIndoorCarpet
 Ecuador1–4 Great BritainGuayaquilClub NacionalOutdoorClay
 Italy2–3 CroatiaRomeForo ItalicoOutdoorClay
 Slovakia3–2 ChilePrešovMestská halaIndoorCarpet
 Spain4–0 UzbekistanAlbaceteTennis Club de AlbaceteOutdoorClay
 United States4–1 IndiaWinston-Salem, NCLawrence Joel ColisseumIndoorHard

Americas Zone

Group I

Second round play-offs
21–23 September
First round play-offs
20–22 July
First round
9–11 February
Second round
6–8 April
 Canada
Mexico City, Mexico (clay)byeCórdoba, Argentina (clay)
 Canada3 Canada0
 Mexico2Mendoza, Argentina (clay) Argentina5
 Mexico0
Atizapán de Zaragoza, MX (indoor carpet) Argentina5
 Mexico3
 Peru2Nassau, Bahamas (hard)
 Bahamas3
 Peru2Nassau, Bahamas (hard)
 Peru Bahamas1
bye Chile4
bye
 Chile
  •  Peru relegated to Group II in 2002.
  •  Argentina and  Chile advance to World Group qualifying round.

Group II

Group III

  • Venue: Cuba
  • Date: 14–18 March

Final standings

RankTeam
1  Cuba
2  Trinidad and Tobago
3  Jamaica
4  El Salvador
5  Honduras
6  Puerto Rico
7  Bolivia
8  Bermuda

Group IV

Final standings

RankTeam
1  Haiti
2  Panama
3  Eastern Caribbean
4  Saint Lucia
5  Barbados
6  U.S. Virgin Islands
7  Antigua and Barbuda

Asia/Oceania Zone

Group I

Second Round Play-offsFirst Round Play-offsFirst RoundSecond Round
Jakarta, Indonesia (hard)
 Uzbekistan3
Seoul, South Korea (hard) Indonesia2Invercargill, NZ (indoor carpet)
 Indonesia1 Uzbekistan3
 South Korea4Seoul, South Korea (indoor carpet) New Zealand2
 South Korea2
Jakarta, Indonesia (hard) New Zealand3
 Indonesia4
 China1Tokyo, Japan (indoor hard)
 Thailand1
Nonthaburi, Thailand (hard) Japan4Tokyo, Japan (indoor hard)
 Thailand5 Japan2
 China0Langfang, China (indoor hard) India3
 China2
 India3
  •  China relegated to Group II in 2002.
  •  Uzbekistan and  India advance to World Group qualifying round.

Group II

Relegation Play-offsFirst RoundSecond RoundThird Round
Kuwait City, Kuwait (hard)
 Lebanon4
Mishref, Kuwait (hard) Kuwait1Yarze, Lebanon (clay)
 Kuwait4 Lebanon3
 Iran1Causeway Bay, Hong Kong (hard) Hong Kong2
 Iran1
 Hong Kong4Yarze, Lebanon (clay)
 Lebanonw/o
Damascus, Syria (indoor hard) Chinese Taipei
 Syria2
Damascus, Syria (indoor hard) Malaysia3Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (indoor hard)
 Syria0 Malaysia0
 Pakistan5Taichung, Taiwan (clay) Chinese Taipei5
 Pakistan2
 Chinese Taipei3
  •  Iran and  Syria relegated to Group III in 2002.
  •  Lebanon promoted to Group I in 2002.

Group III

Final standings

RankTeam
1  Kazakhstan
2  Philippines
3  Tajikistan
4  Singapore
5  Saudi Arabia
6  Qatar
7  Sri Lanka
8  Bahrain

Group IV

Final standings

RankTeam
1  United Arab Emirates
2  Pacific Oceania
3  Iraq
4  Oman
5  Jordan
6  Brunei
7  Fiji
8  Bangladesh

Europe/Africa Zone

Group I

Second Round Play-offsFirst Round Play-offsFirst RoundSecond Round
 Great Britain
Solihull, England (indoor carpet)
bye
bye Great Britain5
Maia, Portugal (clay)
 Ukraine Portugal0
 Ukraine2
Wels, Austria (indoor hard)
 Portugal3
 Ukraine1
 Austria4
 Austria
Pula, Croatia (indoor carpet)
bye
 Austria Austria1
bye Croatia4
bye
 Croatia
 Belarus
Minsk, Belarus (indoor carpet)
bye
bye Belarus3
 Zimbabwe Zimbabwe2
bye
Harare, Zimbabwe (indoor hard)
 Zimbabwe
 Zimbabwe3
Helsinki, Finland (indoor carpet)
 Slovenia2
 Slovenia2
Helsinki, Finland (indoor carpet)
 Finland3
 Slovenia Finland2
bye Italy3
bye
 Italy

Group II

Relegation Play-offsFirst RoundSecond RoundThird Round
Szeged, Hungary (clay)
 Hungary5
Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France (clay)Skagen, Denmark (hard)
 Monaco0
 Monaco1 Hungary2
Dublin, Ireland (indoor carpet)
 Ireland4 Denmark3
 Ireland2
Athens, Greece (clay)
 Denmark3
 Denmark2
Istanbul, Turkey (hard)
 Greece3
 Greece5
Chișinău, Moldova (clay)Athens, Greece (clay)
 Turkey0
 Turkey2 Greece5
Chișinău, Moldova (indoor carpet)
 Moldova3 Armenia0
 Armenia3
 Moldova2
Tallinn, Estonia (indoor carpet)
 Norway3
Abidjan, Ivory Coast (hard)Mondorf-les-Bains, Luxembourg (clay)
 Estonia2
 Estonia2 Norway2
Esch-sur-Alzette, Lux. (indoor carpet)
 Ivory Coast3 Luxembourg3
 Luxembourg3
Mondorf-les-Bains, Luxembourg (clay)
 Ivory Coast2
 Luxembourg1
Bytom, Poland (clay)
 Israel4
 Poland2
Belgrade, Yugoslavia (clay)Ramat HaSharon, Israel (hard)
 Israel3
 Poland2 Israel3
Nelspruit, South Africa (hard)
 Yugoslavia3 South Africa2
 Yugoslavia0
 South Africa5

Group III

Zone A

Final standings

RankTeam
1  Latvia
2  Ghana
3  Lithuania
4  Madagascar
5  Botswana
6  Iceland
7  Georgia
8  Kenya

Zone B

Final standings

RankTeam
1  Bulgaria
2  Egypt
3  Bosnia and Herzegovina
4  Macedonia
5  Mauritius
6  Namibia
7  Togo
  •  Bulgaria and  Egypt promoted to Group II in 2002.
  •  Togo relegated to Group IV in 2002.

Group IV

Zone A

Group A

RankTeam
1  Cyprus
2  Algeria
3  Benin
4  Rwanda
5  Lesotho
6  Sudan

Group B

RankTeam
1  Tunisia
2  Azerbaijan
3  San Marino
4  Burkina Faso
5  Gabon
6  Uganda

Zone B

Group A

RankTeam
1  Andorra
2  Angola
3  Malta
4  Ethiopia
5  Libya

Group B

RankTeam
1  Zambia
2  Mali
3  Senegal
4  Djibouti

References

General
  • "World Group 2001". DavisCup.com. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
Specific
  1. Bud Collins (2010). The Bud Collins History of Tennis (2nd ed.). [New York]: New Chapter Press. pp. 495–496, 505. ISBN 978-0942257700.
  2. "Australia v France". daviscup.com.
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