Herald on Sunday

Doubles troubles as Kiwis crushed

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New Zealand have blown a golden opportunit­y to advance in the Davis Cup yesterday in Tianjin.

Poised at 1-1 in their Asia Oceania Group 1 tie against China in Tianjin, and heavy favourites to win the doubles, New Zealand were in prime position to advance to the next round.

However, Marcus Daniell and Artem Sitak’s shock straight sets defeat in the doubles rubber to Ze Zhang and Mao Xin Gong put China on top for the reverse singles, and despite a strong effort from Rubin Statham, New Zealand lost the tie 3-1.

It was a big ask for Statham to send it to a decider, going up against 18-year-old Yibing Wu, the new star of Chinese tennis who won the US Open boys’ title in September, becoming the first Chinese player to win a junior Grand Slam. He impressed at Auckland’s ASB Classic as a wildcard last month, pushing four-time champion David Ferrer.

Wu was a late change for the Chinese and the 30-year-old Kiwi played strongly in the first set as he raced through it 6-1.

However, Wu found his range and rhythm in the second set and eventually ground down the gutsy Statham, winning 1-6 6-3 6-4 in just over two hours.

Statham had Wu at 15-40 serving at 3-4 in the decider but was unable to make the crucial break with Wu saving three break points and then breaking Statham’s serve in the very next game.

The victory clinched the tie for China, who go on to play India in April for a place in September’s World Group qualifying round.

For New Zealand, it’s a massive disappoint­ment after believing they had a strong chance of taking out the tie.

But things went surprising­ly wrong from the start of the doubles.

The Chinese opted to replace Xin Gao with their top singles player Ze Zhang and it proved a masterstro­ke.

Zhang was the best player on the court as he teamed with Gong to defeat the experience­d Kiwi combinatio­n of Daniell and Sitak, 6-4 6-4.

Daniell and Sitak were guilty of serving a staggering 10 double faults between them and had a first serve percentage of just 56 per cent compared with 74 per cent for their opponents.

Zhang and Gong were able to convert two of their four break point chances, while Daniell and Sitak managed only one break point off the Chinese players’ serves.

New Zealand captain Alistair Hunt was disappoint­ed at missing a rare opportunit­y for a notable win.

“With Davis Cup, anything can happen out there, you don’t know what the other team is going to do. They played really well and our guys didn’t play their best,” Hunt told Radio Sport last night.

“The boys had a tough doubles — it’s been an incredible record of not losing in doubles for about four years basically in the Davis Cup.

“At some stage, [a loss] was always going to happen and unfortunat­ely it happened [yesterday].”

Hunt noted the shortened threeset format didn’t allow as much time to adjust, which proved problemati­c for the slow-starting doubles pairing.

“When it’s one-off matches like this and especially with the shortened format, if we’re not starting quick enough, then we’re going to struggle and that’s what happened [yesterday],” he said.

The defeat will see New Zealand face a trip to South Korea later this year for a relegation tie, with the Koreans going down to Pakistan 3-0 in Islamabad yesterday.

It will be a daunting task, especially if Korea call on their new superstar, Australian Open singles semifinali­st Hyeon Chung.

 ?? Photosport.nz ?? Rubin Statham put in a strong effort.
Photosport.nz Rubin Statham put in a strong effort.

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