Times of Oman

Australia set to reject Davis Cup revamp

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LONDON: A planned radical revamp of the Davis Cup could be in jeopardy after Tennis Australia said in a strongly worded letter that it planned to “vote against the proposed amendments” since the reform process has been “far from transparen­t”.

The Internatio­nal Tennis Federation (ITF) had been hoping its proposal to transform the 118-year-old men’s competitio­n into an 18-team season finale would be given the green light at its Aug. 13 to 16 AGM in Orlando, Florida.

But Tennis Australia said in the letter, addressed to the “President, Board and CEOs of Davis Cup Nations” and seen by Reuters, that it would not endorse the ITF’s World Cup of Tennis Finals, which will replace the Davis Cup and be played in one location over seven days scheduled for November 2019.

Tennis Australia said there was no clarity over the 25-year, $3 billion partnershi­p to stage the event with investment group Kosmos, which was founded by Barcelona and Spain soccer player Gerard Pique, and described by the ITF as a ‘game-changer’.

The letter has been signed by Tennis Australia CEO Craig Tiley plus several former Australia Davis Cup captains as well as incumbent Lleyton Hewitt.

“We have written and spoken to the ITF President for several months now requesting clarity on the proposal from Kosmos, but this has not been forthcomin­g,” said the letter, which was also signed by four past and present Tennis Australia senior officials, including former ITF president Brian Tobin.

“Very large numbers are being referenced, but there is not enough detail to give us confidence this proposal will genuinely deliver enough additional value to players and the nations to offset the loss of home and away camaraderi­e and all the local marketing, facility investment and player developmen­t benefit that comes with those ties.

“In the absence of such important informatio­n, we have no choice other than to vote against the proposed amendments.”

Tennis Europe, a regional governing body representi­ng 50 member nations, also opposed the proposal. “I am particular­ly concerned that there is hardly any informatio­n received from the ITF regarding bank guarantees for the proposed US$120 million per year which would be the $3 billion deal over 25 years, according to the original proposal,” Tennis Europe President Vladimir Dmitriev said in a separate letter also seen by Reuters.

“I have not yet seen a final and feasible explanatio­n on how the business model or the governance structure will be either.”

The ITF’s shake-up of the Davis Cup has been undermined after the men’s governing body, the ATP, announced plans to introduce a rival World Team Cup, a men’s event offering $15 million in prize money plus ranking points, into the calendar from early 2020 in Australia.

Player Boycott?

A smaller World Team Cup was held from 1978 to 2012 in Duesseldor­f, Germany but offered no ranking points. The new competitio­n is expected to be a part of the build-up to January’s Australian Open.

Last month the ITF accused the ATP of not working together “in a beneficial and positive way for the whole of tennis”, but the prospect of staging two rival team competitio­ns within a few weeks in a crowded men’s calendar has divided the players.

“The recent decision by the Associatio­n of Tennis Profession­als (ATP) to implement the World Team Cup in Australia leads us to believe that a significan­t number of players will boycott the planned Davis Cup format because it has an unfavourab­le date, and no ranking points will be awarded,” Dmitriev added.

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 ??  ?? IN JEOPARDY: The Davis Cup
IN JEOPARDY: The Davis Cup

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