Sunday News

Bulgaria build commanding 2-0 lead over Kiwis in Davis Cup

- BRENDON EGAN

NEW Zealand’s Davis Cup tennis team have a mountain to climb if they’re to avoid being relegated to World Group Two.

Bulgaria claimed both singles rubbers to leave New Zealand in a 2-0 hole in their World Group 1 playoff at Christchur­ch’s Wilding Park on Saturday.

On a scorching Christchur­ch day, where temperatur­es soared to a high of 32 degrees Celsius, inexperien­ced New Zealand duo Ajeet Rai and KP Pannu fought bravely against their more fancied Bulgarian opponents.

Alexandar Lazarov powered past Rai 7-6 6-2 in the opening rubber of the day.

Dimitar Kuzmanov, the Bulgaria squad’s top ranked singles player, came from a set down to subdue the plucky Pannu in just his second Davis Cup tie, winning 5-7 6-3 6-2.

It was a gutsy showing from

Pannu, ranked 576th in the world for singles – 384 spots lower than 192-ranked Kuzmanov.

New Zealand’s task of an upset tie win got steeper when veteran Rubin Statham was a late injury scratching on Saturday, managing an Achilles issue.

The Kiwis will need their excellent doubles combinatio­n of Michael Venus and Artem Sitak to win today’s opening rubber and the reverse singles to pull off a comeback triumph.

Statham’s injury absence was a blow for the Kiwis with the 35-year-old, who debuted in 2005, New Zealand’s most capped Davis Cup player in history with 33 ties.

Statham could have created New Zealand Davis Cup history on Saturday with a win, overtaking Onny Parun for the most overall wins (singles and doubles). Statham and Parun are tied on 30 wins with Statham achieving 28 in singles.

New Zealand will hope he is healthy enough to go today, but if the tie is out of reach he might not be risked.

New Zealand Davis Cup captain Kelly Evernden was heartened by what he saw from Rai and Pannu and believed they would be better for the experience.

‘‘When we were in Finland [in September and they struggled] to here it’s night and day. The way they’re playing it’s great.

‘‘The big thing we’re trying to get everyone to understand is nobody is going to give it to you at this level, so you’ve got to go out there and when you get opportunit­ies like that you’ve got to take them.’’

Pannu survived three set points in the 10th game of the first set to hold serve and lock it at 5-5 in a gritty display.

The 26-year-old Wellington­ian. fed off that confidence, producing some fine play to break Kuzmanov’s serve and go ahead, before closing out the first set 7-5.

After the one hour, 17-minute

first set duel the sun-drenched crowd erupted.

Kuzmanov fought back, setting up a deciding third set with a convincing showing in the second set. He finally broke Pannu’s serve for the first time in the match after more than two hours to go ahead 5-3 and then held serve to take it.

Kuzmanov was clearly energised by his second set win and broke Pannu’s serve in the third game of the third set to move ahead 2-1.

He never looked back from there.

In the earlier match, it all unravelled in the first set tiebreaker for Rai with Lazarov showing his class and forcing unforced errors to prevail 7-1. The second set was all Lazarov, who broke Rai’s serve in the opening game and was tough to stop from there.

 ?? CHRIS SYMES ?? New Zealand’s K P Pannu took the first set but his much higher-ranked opponent, Bulgaria’s Dimitar Kuzmanov came through to give the visitors a 2-0 lead in the Davis Cup tie at Christchur­ch’s Wilding Park.
CHRIS SYMES New Zealand’s K P Pannu took the first set but his much higher-ranked opponent, Bulgaria’s Dimitar Kuzmanov came through to give the visitors a 2-0 lead in the Davis Cup tie at Christchur­ch’s Wilding Park.

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