The Day

Davis Cup format is overhauled for 2019

Will be decided with a season-ending, 18-team tournament at a neutral site

- By BRIAN MAHONEY AP Sports Writer

The Davis Cup is getting a radical makeover in hopes of reviving an event that has lost some luster.

Beginning next year, the top team event in men's tennis will be decided with a season-ending, 18-team tournament at a neutral site.

The Internatio­nal Tennis Federation believes this format will be more attractive to elite players who often pass on competing for their countries because of a crowded schedule.

Teams will play one week in February to advance to the championsh­ip in November, replacing the current Davis Cup format that is played over four weekends throughout the year. Players will compete for what the ITF says rivals Grand Slam prize money.

The $3 billion, 25-year agreement was approved Thursday at the organizati­on's conference in Orlando, Florida. Two-thirds of the delegates needed to vote for the reforms, and 71 percent did.

Beginning in 2019, 24 nations will compete in a home-oraway qualifying round in February, with the 12 winners advancing to the final tournament. They will be joined by the four semifinali­sts from the previous year, along with two wild-card teams, who need to be in either the top 50 of the Davis Cup rankings or have a top-10 singles player to be eligible.

The finalists will be placed into six, three-team groups for round-robin play, involving two singles matches and one doubles, all best-of-three-sets — instead of the current best-of-five format featuring four singles matches and one doubles. The winners, along with the next two teams with the best records, will advance to the single-eliminatio­n quarterfin­als.

The first championsh­ip will be held on an indoor hardcourt from Nov. 18-24, 2019, in either Madrid or Lille, France. ITF President David Haggerty said he expected that announceme­nt in the next two weeks.

The new event was developed in partnershi­p with the investment group Kosmos, which was founded by Barcelona and Spain soccer player Gerard Pique.

The original plan called for simply an 18-team championsh­ip at the end of the year, but was amended after some nations objected to the loss of home-site matches. So those were added to the proposal as the qualifying round, though that still wasn't enough for critics of the plan who felt neutral-site matches were too much of a change for an event that dates to 1900.

"Those that were opposed were generally opposed because they may believe that home-and-away should be the way that the format is played and always should be every round," Haggerty said, adding he believed the February qualifying round "gives us the combinatio­n of history and tradition that we maintain as well as innovation with the finals."

The U.S. Tennis Associatio­n was among the national federation­s that backed the changes.

The organizati­on said the new format will "project Davis Cup into the 21st century" and elevate the competitio­n to "the heights it deserves."

The Americans will play at Croatia in this year's semifinals in September, with Spain and France meeting in the other semifinals. Top-ranked Rafael Nadal is expected to play for Spain, but Roger Federer has frequently passed on playing for Switzerlan­d.

The new format would cut in half the Davis Cup time commitment. Pique is among those who think the World Cup-style format is the boost the event needs.

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