Millennium Post

PAES DROPPED FROM DAVIS CUP

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BENGALURU: Long-serving Leander Paes was on Thursday dropped for the first time in 27 years from India’s Davis Cup squad as non-playing captain Mahesh Bhupathi picked Rohan Bopanna instead for the tie against Uzbekistan.

The Asia/oceania Zone Group I tie begins here on Friday.

Bopanna will pair up with Sriram Balaji in the second round doubles tie and lock horns with Farrukh Dustov and Sanjar Fayziev at the Karnataka State Lawn Tennis Associatio­n.

Bopanna is ranked 24th in the world, 29 spots above Olympic medallist and multiple Grand Slam winner Paes (53rd).

Ramkumar Ramanathan will spearhead India’s singles challenge in place of injured Yuki Bhambri. Ramanathan will face Temur Ismailov in the first singles rubber on Friday.

Prajnesh Gunneswara­n, who replaced the injured Bhambri, will take on Fayziev in the second singles rubber.

In the reverse singles on Sunday, Ramanathan could face Fayziev and Gunneswara­n will be playing the final rubber against Ismailov.

Justifying his decision to pick Bopanna over Paes, Bhupathi said the Bengaluru lad is serving and seeing the ball well and also had a good start to the year.

“Yeah, like I said the conditions obviously are very quick here. Rohan is serving well... That was the basis of the decision,” Bhupathi said.

Paes, who made his Davis Cup debut against Japan in 1990 at Jaipur, has been dropped from the Davis Cup team on form - or the lack of it - for the first time in nearly three decades.

Over the last couple of Davis Cup ties involving India, the focus has had been centered around Paes going past Nicola Pietrangel­i’s record of 42 doubles rubbers’ wins.

Bhupathi said it was a tough decision to drop his one-time doubles partner.

“It was tough and that is why the last-minute decision. I was clear from the start that I wanted to go with three singles options only because the couple of boys have never played under Davis Cup stress situation, so going in with two (doubles) specialist­s was going to be a high-risk situation,” he said.

Bhupathi said the other players in the team had practised more than Paes.

“I think these boys have been here since Sunday, and we were able to play a lot of sets with Rohan and Bala. They played three sets everyday. Leander, unfortunat­ely, came only yesterday and he played three games and it started raining.

So, there wasn’t Davis Cup doubles highest stress situations,” he said.

Asked if Paes stood a chance had he joined earlier, Bhupathi said: “If I had the full team by Sunday and Monday, I would have had more time probably to make a dedicated decision.”

When asked if it was end of the road for Paes, Bhupathi responded in the negative.

“Not at all. I made it clear to everyone involved, including Leander, that this is by no means the end of the road. His being in the team is invaluable, the experience, the energy he brings to Davis Cup ...,” he said.

Bhupathi said he is not a big believer of having doubles specialist­s in the Davis Cup team unless they are among the top five in the world.

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