The Scotsman

Britain hope experience is key to success as French play game of risk

● Noah drops Simon and picks Chardy for his first Davis Cup tie since 2011

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Great Britain are hoping experience counts in their favour after France captain Yannick Noah took a risk in his team selection for the Davis Cup quarter-final in Rouen.

Noah dropped his original pick Gilles Simon in favour of French No 9 Jeremy Chardy, ranked 38 places lower at world No 68 and thrust into his first Davis Cup tie since 2011.

Chardy will play the second singles match at the Kindarena today against Dan Evans, the British No 1 for the tie, after 17th-ranked Lucas Pouille has faced Kyle Edmund.

Tomorrow’s doubles will pit Nicolas Mahut and Julien Benneteau against Jamie Murray and Dom Inglot, before the reverse singles on Sunday.

With Gael Monfils and Richard Gasquet injured and new father Jo-wilfried Tsonga also missing, France, the strongest nation in men’s tennis, will rely on two players with just six Davis Cup rubbers between them.

Explaining his decision to bring in Chardy, Noah said: “He was playing well. Coming to play on clay takes some time to adapt and he did it very well. I think the clay suits his game and from what I saw in the practice sessions he was really good.

“Gilles has been playing Davis Cup for a long time, sometimes successful­ly, sometimes it was more painful. As for Jeremy, yes he’s new but he doesn’t have anything to lose. I can see the way they play, the way they behave, the body language and the results when they play sets, I could really sense that he wanted it, he was getting ready to play, he was playing well.

“It’s not easy to go and tell Gilles that he’s not playing, that’s for sure. Some people might say it’s a good idea, some might say it’s not but at the end I have to make the decision.”

GB captain Leon Smith is relying on the same side that defeated Canada in round one in the absence of Andy Murray, who is recovering from an elbow injury.

France remain the favourites but Edmund and Evans can boast 24 Davis Cup rubbers between them and have both played winning roles in ties.

Smith said: “That can definitely help because it is a very different experience. There’s a lot of expectatio­n on the French team, they’re favourites for this tie, they’ll have the home fans. They’ve talked a lot about wanting success, Yannick’s talked a lot about wanting success in this competitio­n so there’s a lot riding on it for them, as there is for us obviously.”

Smith’s main challenge in the build-up has been convincing clay-phobic Evans that he can play well on the surface. Tim Henman, who had a similar game to Evans and reached the French Open semi-finals late in his career, has been offering his advice and Evans has spoken positively about the challenge. But Smith clearly knows the

0 Jamie Murray smiles during practice ahead of the Davis Cup quarter-final against France in Rouen. chances of an Evans victory today are very slim at best.

“In time I think he can play relatively well on the surface but at the start, certainly the first match [on clay] in a couple of years, it’s going to take him time to put all the pieces together,” said the Scot.

Evans and Edmund have mirrored each other’s success over the last year, climbing into the top 50 and claiming notable scalps.

Noah said: “They are good players, up and coming, so we haven’t seen everything yet. They can show better things. We respect them. We believe we are going to have a very close tie.

“All that I keep hearing is that we are favourites, and that because Andy Murray’s not here we’re going to win. I keep trying to tell people: ‘No, it’s going to be very difficult’.

“Evans and Edmund are good players. We’ve been doingaloto­fvideowork.ican’t tell you what I saw, in terms of [their] strengths and weaknesses, but it’s going to be a very close contest.”

Djokovic back from injury to spearhead Serbian bid

Returning to the court after anelbowinj­ury,novakdjoko­vic will play Albert Ramos Vinolas in today’s opening singles match when Serbia meet Spain in the Davis Cup quarter-finals.

Yesterday’s draw also pits Viktor Troicki against Pablo Carreno Busta in the bestof-five series played on an indoor hard court in the Serbian capital Belgrade.

Tomorrow, the doubles will feature Nenad Zimonjic and Troicki against Marc Lopez and Jaume Munar. Reverse singles are scheduled for Sunday.

Djokovic has dropped from his world No 1 ranking after a slump in form following his French Open title win last year. He withdrew from the Miami Open because of a lingering right elbow injury.

Spain will be without their two top-ranked players,

0 Novak Djokovic: Return. Rafael Nadal and Roberto Bautista Agut.

“We must not underestim­ate them. The fact that Nadal and Agut did not come means nothing,” said Djokovic, who added that he has been training “with full capacity”.

Five-time champions Spain are trying to make the semi-finals for the first time since 2012. Djokovic led Serbia to their only title in 2010. Top seed Madison Keys, Venus Williams and Elena Vesnina were among the big names to suffer on a day of upsets at the Volvo Car Open in Charleston.

Keys, pictured, was beaten 4-6, 6-1, 6-2 by fellow American Shelby Rogers while Williams, seeded third, went down 6-4, 6-7 (3/7), 7-5 to German Laura Siegemund.

Williams saved match point in the second set but that only delayed the end result as Siegemund twice pulled back from a break and saved two match points while 5-4 down in the third.

Teenage qualifier Fanny Stollar caused a major upset by despatchin­g Vesnina, seeded fourth, 7-6 (9/7), 7-6 (7/3) to reach the third round.

The 18-year-old Hungarian was twice a break behind in the opening set but Vesnina, the BNP Paribas Open champion, could not make the most of all the break points she had as Stollar responded with 13 aces. She edged ahead in the tie-break and assumed control, leading for most of the match, but appeared unable to get over the line as Vesnina, a two-time Charleston finalist, saved five match points at 5-4 in the second set to force another tie-break.

However, Stollar prevailed once more and took victory in two hours and five minutes to set up a clash with fellow youngster Jelena Ostapenko, after the Latvian took out Greek star Maria Sakkari 6-2, 4-6, 6-2.

Daria Kasatkina maintained her first-round form to beat Puerto Rico’s Monica Puig 6-0, 6-7 (3/7), 6-2.

There were also straightse­ts victories by Naomi Osaka, Lucie Safarova, Kiki Bertens, Mirjana Lucicbaron­i, Ons Jabeur, qualifier Anastasia Rodionova and Anastasija Sevastova.

Meanwhile, Britain’s Naomi Broady lost her second-round match at the Abierto Monterrey in Mexico, going down 6-3, 6-2 to Hungarian fifth seed Timea Babos.

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