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The all-new Davis Cup: Key talking points

Ticket sales for the morning sessions have been slow.

The new-look Davis Cup will kick off on Monday with 18 teams battling it out for the trophy in Madrid.

A radical overhaul of the historic competition has largely done away with the home and away format, and the finals will be played on indoor hard courts at the Caja Magica.

Here, the PA news agency picks out five talking points for the week.

Atmosphere

Passionate crowds have been a staple of Davis Cup ties
Passionate crowds have been a staple of Davis Cup ties (Mike Egerton/PA)

The radical changes have been hugely controversial, particularly among fans, who are largely very unhappy that the chance to watch their team on home soil has been taken away. Only the two group stage ties involving Spain have sold out, with organisers telling PA they were happy with afternoon sales but that morning ties were proving a challenge. A major part of what made Davis Cup ties loved and treasured by players and fans alike was the partisan atmosphere generated. If these matches are played in half empty stadiums with little noise, the event will not be seen as a success.

Format

Twenty-five ties will be crammed into seven days, with the 18 teams split into six groups. The group winners plus two best runners-up will progress to the quarter-finals on Thursday and Friday, before the semi-finals and final are played out over the weekend. Traditionally, World Group ties consisted of four singles rubbers and one doubles, all best-of-five sets. Here, ties are made up of two singles rubbers and one doubles, all best-of-three sets. Whether some of the drama is lost, and whether doubles remains central to the narrative, are two of the big questions.

Match-ups

The impetus behind the switch to a World Cup-style event was to try to encourage the leading players to return to the event, with the commitment of top-20 players increasingly poor. Organisers would have been very pleased to see most of the eligible top names present when the teams were announced last month. One black mark against the competition was that, under the old format, there was not a single meeting between the ‘big four’ of Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray. The latter three are all expected to represent their countries in Madrid.

The Pique factor

Gerard Pique is the man behind the changes to the competition
Gerard Pique is the man behind the changes to the competition (Ian Hodgson/PA)

Would the changes have been so controversial had the man behind them not been as high profile as Barcelona footballer Gerard Pique? Critics refer to the tournament disparagingly as the ‘Pique Cup’, and the defender has been involved in an unseemly war of words with Federer. Pique’s Kosmos company has promised to plough a staggering three billion US dollars into tennis over 25 years but his investors will expect a lot back and, if income from ticket sales, TV rights and sponsorship does not live up to expectations, what does that mean for the future of the deal? Kosmos is expected to put on a glitzy event, with Pique’s wife Shakira booked to sing at the closing ceremony.

ATP row

The stakes would be high anyway but are even higher because of the looming shadow of the ATP Cup. The ATP and the International Tennis Federation, which oversees Davis Cup, have been engaged in a power struggle that has resulted in two near identical competitions being held within six weeks of each other. The new ATP Cup will take place in Australia in January, boasting big prize money and ranking points. Perceived wisdom is that only one event can survive in the long term. An underwhelming Davis Cup could put its future at risk.

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