Kuwait Times

UK close to redemption after plumbing depths

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LONDON: John Lloyd will be in the commentary box when Britain face Belgium in next week’s Davis Cup final, presumably sitting more comfortabl­y than he was five years ago in Vilnius when the country’s fortunes were sinking to a new low. Then, as captain and with his team heading for a fifth-straight defeat, this time 3-2 against Lithuania, he could only squirm as a gloating fan goaded him about his job prospects.

“There was one chap who weighed about 20 stone and sat on three seats and had a very nice voice, but he started singing from very early on ‘John Lloyd you’ll be sacked in the morning’,” Lloyd said in a BBC radio program charting Britain’s fall and rise in the prestigiou­s team event this week. “At one stage I wanted to get a ball and aim it at his head. I wouldn’t have thought we had many worse matches than that.” There have been plenty to choose from, too, in the 37 years since Britain last reached the final, against the US when former Australian Open runner-up Lloyd was demolished by a rising force named John McEnroe.

There was a 5-0 defeat in Slovakia in 1995 that sent Britain into a Group Two relegation playoff against mighty Monaco and a home defeat by Ecuador in 2000 when rookie Giovanni Lapentti, playing his first match on a grasscourt, sealed their fate. Or even the humiliatin­g 4-1 home defeat by Zimbabwe in 1997. Take your pick. Captains have come and gone and a succession of willing but limited players have tried and failed to put Britain on the tennis map they dominated until 1936 when they won their ninth, and most recent, Davis Cup title. Even Tim Henman and Greg Rusedski, both top-10 players, could not inspire a Davis Cup challenge and until Britain beat the US in 2014 they had gone 28 years without a World Group win.

It has been an interestin­g journey through the tennis wilderness though, nowhere more so than in Odessa in 2006 when the visiting British team, which included Andy Murray, was given a changing room that doubled as a brothel. “The only one who I had to explain it to was Greg (Rusedski),” Lloyd recalled of that win in Ukraine. “He didn’t know why there were mirrors on the ceiling and all that stuff.” Since then, Murray has gone on to become one of the best players in the world, winning Wimbledon and the US Open, and has led Britain almost single-handedly to next week’s Davis Cup final in Ghent where they start as favourites.

Intrepid bats

Tennis hacks and success-starved fans are still pinching themselves because not so long ago the idea that Britain would be challengin­g the likes of Spain, France, Switzerlan­d and the United States would have seemed laughable. Yet, despite all the tales of woe, the intrepid bunch who call themselves BATS (British Associatio­n of Tennis Supporters) have stayed loyal, following the team through thick and, mostly thin, and often playing unexpected roles.—Reuters

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