New Straits Times

Indian stars in spat over Davis Cup selection

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NEW DELHI: A simmering feud between tennis stalwarts Leander Paes and Mahesh Bhupathi has boiled over into an ugly public spat following India’s latest Davis Cup triumph in Bangalore.

No sooner had the hosts sealed a 4-1 win on Sunday over Uzbekistan in the second round of the Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Group 1 tie, than Bhupathi lashed out at his former doubles partner, who was dropped from the squad last week.

“We gave him the option (of being a part of the squad and playing as a reserve) and he readily took it,” Bhupathi, the non-playing Davis Cup captain, said after the win helped India qualify for the World Group playoff.

“So after that, to sulk about not being in the (playing) four was a bit unprofessi­onal,” Bhupathi said of his friend-turned-foe.

Adding fuel to the fire, Bhupathi put up a screen shot of his WhatsApp conversati­on with Paes on social media in a free-forall slugfest aimed at countering Paes’ charge of being dropped in humiliatin­g fashion at the last minute.

The conversati­on suggested that Paes had agreed to join the squad despite being told there was no guarantee he would be in the final four.

Paes, 43, hit back, accusing Bhupathi of using his position to deliberate­ly keep him out of the squad.

“I was never categorica­lly told that I would not be playing, but it was apparent that the decision was made before I arrived in Bangalore. This is what I found unnecessar­y and disrespect­ful,” Paes said in a statement.

“That a private (WhatsApp) exchange has been made public just points to the kind of conduct that I find unbecoming of a Davis Cup captain.”

“Talk is cheap, history books, however, don’t lie.”

Paes, dropped for the first time in 27 years, is just one win away from becoming the most successful doubles player in Davis Cup history.

With 42 doubles wins, Paes is currently tied with Italian legend Nicola Pietrangel­i.

Paes, whose Atlanta bronze was India’s first individual medal at a Games since 1952, has 18 Grand Slam doubles trophies — eight in men’s doubles and 10 in mixed.

He shared three of his Grand Slam doubles titles with Bhupathi.

The chest-bumps the duo exchanged after winning every point became an emblem of their partnershi­p, which at its peak was hailed as the “Indian Express.”

They continued to team up occasional­ly on court, even as the friendship began to derail.

But their verbal volleys gradually turned sharper, with frequent spats over team spots, most notably ahead of the 2012 Olympics. AFP

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