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Home -> Tennis
Russia win Davis Cup as Safin beats Acasuso
Monday, December 04, 2006 04:43 [IST]

Moscow: The 2002 Davis Cup winners Russia won their second trophy here on Sunday after Marat Safin beat Jose Acasuso of Argentina in the deciding rubber of the final.


 The former Australian Open and US Open champion won 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (7/5) in 2hr 50min for a hard-fought victory, breaking the curse of their home courts, where Russia had lost both of their previous Davis Cup finals  to Sweden in 1994 and to the United States in 1995.

"I'm happy to win in front of my home fans," Safin said after the match.

"It was really hard to win today as I experienced serious problems with the surface as I failed to adjust my playing to the carpet," he said.


"I'm glad I won in four sets. I was sure Nikolay (Davydenko) would win his match but after he lost I was pretty nervous. I also have problems with my heel and knees. I was afraid I could lose the match if I failed to win the tiebreak," he said.


"I'm very happy for all of us and all of our fantastic supporters," he added.

Safin, 26, who won only one of his previous three meetings with Acasuso, came out firing, breaking his rival's first service game to move ahead 3-0, which proved enough to serve out the first set in 30 minutes.

In the second the 24-year-old Argentine bounced back to break Safin's serve in the sixth game and level at one set all.


Spurred by a capacity 11,000 home crowd Safin's confidence seemed to return in the third set and he broke twice to Acasuso's once to take a 2-1 lead.


The fourth was a tight affair that was finally decided by a tiebreak, with Safin edging it 7-5 after some brilliant back court defence was followed by Acasuso netting a forehand as he moved up the court.


That sent the partisan home fans into rapturous applause.

Earlier on Sunday world number eight David Nalbandian of Argentina beat Russia's Nikolay Davydenko 6-2, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4 in two hours 39 minutes to level the scores at 2-2.

With Russia taking a 2-1 lead after Saturday's doubles rubber, the 24-year-old

Nalbandian had no choice but to step up to the plate and deliver to keep his country in contention.

He started confidently, breaking his rival's serve early for a 4-1 lead in the first set.

Davydenko, currently ranked third in the world, fought back but was ultimately undone by a series of unforced errors, allowing Nalbandian to break again in the eighth game to earn a one-set lead.

The second set was a carbon copy of the first. Nalbandian broke again in the fourth and eighth games to take a commanding 2-0 lead.

Davydenko broke Nalbandian's serve in the ninth game of the third set edge that 6-4.

He then traded breaks with his Argentinian rival throughout the fourth set but Nalbandian's accuracy paid off and he claimed victory when the 25-year-old Russian sent a backhand into the net.

"I played solidly today, while Russia were under a lot of pressure playing at home," Nalbandian said.

 "Luckily I gained confidence again after yesterday's defeat in the doubles. On Friday Davydenko had given the hosts the advantage by beating Juan Ignacio Chela 6-1, 6-2, 5-7, 6-4 in the opening rubber, while Nalbandian beat Safin in straight sets to level proceedings at 1-1," he said.


On Saturday Russia's duo Safin and Dmitry Tursunov lifted their side 2-1 up by beating Nalbandian and Agustin Calleri in straight sets 6-2, 6-3, 6-4 in the doubles clash.

AFP
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