New Straits Times

TSONGA FIRES FRANCE BACK IN CONTENTION

He downs Belgian No 2 to level score in Davis Cup final

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JO-WILFRIED Tsonga pulled France level at 1-1 in the Davis Cup final with an assured three-set win over Belgium’s Steve Darcis in Lille on Friday.

David Goffin had mercilessl­y swept aside close friend Lucas Pouille to give outsiders Belgium the first point at the Stade Pierre-Mauroy.

But World No 15 Tsonga steadied home nerves in the second rubber of the opening day with a 6-3, 6-2, 6-1 success over 76thranked Darcis to boost France’s hopes of claiming the trophy for the first time since 2001.

France’s top player, a beaten finalist against Switzerlan­d at this same venue in 2014, took 1 hour 46 minutes to despatch the Belgian No 2 in the pair’s first ever encounter.

Darcis put up stubborn resistance until Tsonga finally managed to break the Belgian’s serve in the eighth game.

Tsonga’s power denied Darcis any chance of a comeback in the first set and it was plain sailing for the 32-year-old from then on.

“After the first match my job was to get my team back to 1-1, no matter what the score was or how I did it.

“Whether it’s us or the Belgians our mission is to bring home the salad bowl (trophy), that’s the only thing that counts. If I could push the ball on with my teeth, I’d do it!”

Darcis, known as ‘Mr Davis Cup’ by fans after his five match, five win record in the competitio­n, conceded he’d been beaten by the better man.

“I came up against someone who was stronger than me today. The idea was to impose my style of play and stop him doing the same, it didn’t come off.”

Tsonga’s success left the 2017 final finely poised ahead of today’s doubles with France captain Yannick Noah still hesitating whether to stick with his proposed pairing of Richard Gasquet and Pierre-Hugues Herbert, or throw Tsonga into the mix.

Noah suggested the 1-1 scoreline was “logical.”

“The two matches were similar, there was some tension on both sides. Between David and Lucas there was a moment when it was balanced but from when David pulled clear there wasn’t much to do.

“It was similar with Jo. We knew Darcis was a Davis Cup player. He loves to dig in then change a gear to win. But Jo didn’t give him the opportunit­y to do that.

“He (Tsonga) was very solid, he played a very good match. I was delighted. So 1-1 is logical.”

Goffin, the World No 7 won 7-5, 6-3, 6-1 in front of a crowd of close to 26,000 fans, many making the short trip from across the border with Belgium.

Goffin, who last week lost to Grigor Dimitrov in the title decider at the ATP Finals in London, needed just under two hours to give the Belgians the upper hand as they look to win the Davis Cup for the first time.

This was the 26-year-old’s first win over 18th-ranked Pouille in their fourth meeting.

“I’ve pushed the salad bowl a little towards the border, only a little because it’s heavy,” said Goffin, referring to the trophy.

“I’m thrilled to have set the team off like that.”

Noah was keeping his cards close to his chest meanwhile on his pairing for today’s doubles saying he may leave a decision “until the last moment.”

 ?? AFP PIC ?? France’s Jo-Wilfried Tsonga celebrates after beating Belgium’s Steve Darcis in Lille on Friday.
AFP PIC France’s Jo-Wilfried Tsonga celebrates after beating Belgium’s Steve Darcis in Lille on Friday.

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