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Davis Cup Finals 2022: results, matches, series, schedule and all the details of the definition

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Davis Cup Finals 2022: results, matches, series, schedule and all the details of the definition

The US Open is over and in the blink of an eye tennis is back to enjoy a higher ranking tournament. Almost no time after the last Grand Slam of the year, The 2022 Davis Cup finals beginthe most important country tournament in white sport.

The format of the 2022 Davis Cup finals

With this renewed format that replaced the old series, this time a first group stage will be held in four different venues (from 14 to 18 September 2022) and then the definition, with direct elimination, from 23 to September 27. November 2022 in a single space.

The venues will be Bologna (Italy), Glasgow (UK), Valencia (Spain) and Hamburg (Germany).

At this stage, The top two from each group will advance to the direct qualifying phase (quarter-finals, semi-finals and finals), to be held between 23 and 27 November 2022in Malaga, venue set last April 13.

Davis Cup Finals 2022: fixtures, fixtures, series results and standings

Group A | Group B | Group C | Group D

Argentine Times (-2 in Mexico, -1 in the eastern United States, and +5 in Spain)

Group A

Day Time Game Result
September 13 10:00 Argentina vs. Sweden Sweden 2-1
September 14 10:00 Croatia vs. Italy Italy 2-0
September 15 10:00 Croatia vs. Sweden
September 16 10:00 Argentina vs. Italy
September 17 10:00 Croatia vs. Argentina
September 18 10:00 Sweden vs. Italy
  • Argentina vs. Sweden: Ilias Ymer (SUE) Sebastián Báez (ARG), 6-4, 3-6 and 7-6 (4); Mikael Ymer (SUE) Diego Schwartzman (ARG), 6-2 and 6-2; Horacio Zeballos/Maximo Gonzalez (ARG) to Elias Ymer/Andre Gorasson (SUE), 3-6, 6-3, 6-2.
  • Italy vs. Croatia: Lorenzo Musetti (ITA) Borna Gojo (CRO), 6-4 and 6-2; Matteo Berrettini (ITA) over Borna Coric (CRO), 6-7 (4), 6-2 and 6-1.

seats

Equipment J G Pi Different races
Sweden 1 1 0 +1
Argentina 1 0 1 -1
Italy
Croatia

Group B

Day Time Game Result
September 13 11:00 Canada vs. South Korea Canada 2-1
September 14 11:00 Spain vs. Serbian Spain 1-0
September 15 11:00 Serbia vs. South Korea
September 16 11:00 Spain vs. Canada
September 17 11:00 Canada vs. Serbian
September 18 11:00 Spain vs. South Korea
  • Canada vs. South Korea: Vasek Pospisil (CAN) Seong Chang Hong (COR), 4-6, 6-1 and 7-6 (5); Soonwoo Kwon (COR) Felix Auger-Aliassime (CAN), 7-6 (5) and 6-3; Vasek Pospisil and Felix Auger-Aliassime (CAN) Ji Sung Nam and Min-Kyu Song (COR), 7-5, 5-7 and 6-3.
  • Spain vs. Serbian: Albert Ramos (ESP) over Laslo Djere (SRB), 2-6, 7-6 (5) and 7-5.

seats

Equipment J G Pi Different matches
Canada 1 1 0 +1
South Korea 1 0 1 -1
Serbian
Spain

Group C

Day Time Game Result
September 13 9 o’clock Belgium vs. Australia Australia 3-0
September 14 9 o’clock France vs. Germany 1-1
September 15 9 o’clock France vs. Australia
September 16 9 o’clock Germany vs. Belgium
September 17 9 o’clock France vs. Belgium
September 18 9 o’clock Germany vs. Australia
  • Belgium vs. Australia: Jason Kubler (Australia) Zizou Bergs (BEL), 6-4, 1-6 and 6-3; Alex De Minaur (Australia) David Goffin (BEL), 6-2 and 6-2; Matthew Ebden/Max Purcell (AUS) to Sander Gille/Joran Vliegen (BEL), 6-1 and 6-3.
  • France vs. Germany: Jan Lennard Struff (ALE) Benjamin Bonzi (FRA), 6-4, 2-6 and 7-5; Adrian Mannarino (FRA) to Oscar Otte (ALE), 6-4 and 6-3.

seats

Equipment J G Pi Different races
Australia 1 1 0 +3
Belgium 1 0 1 -3
France
Germany

Group D

Day Time Game Result
September 13 11:00 Kazakhstan vs. Netherlands Netherlands 2-1
September 14 11:00 United States vs. Britain
September 15 11:00 United States vs. Kazakhstan
September 16 11:00 Holland vs. Britain
September 17 11:00 Holland vs. USA
September 18 11:00 Great Britain vs. Kazakhstan
  • Holland vs. Kazakhstan: Tallon Griekspoor (PAI) Michael Kukouskin (KAZ), 6-1, 3-6 and 6-3. Botic van de Zandschulp (PAI) Aleksandr Búblik (KAZ), 3-6, 6-1 and 6-4; Aleksandr Bublik and Aleksandr Nedovyesov (KAZ) Wesley Koolhof and Matwe Middelkoop (PAI), 6-4, 1-6 and 6-3.

seats

Equipment J G Pi Different matches
Netherlands 1 1 0 +1
Kazakhstan 1 0 1 -1
USA
Britain

The teams for the Davis Cup finals have been confirmed

Group A

  • Argentina: Diego Schwartzman, Francisco Cerúndolo, Sebastián Báez, Horacio Zeballos and Máximo González.
  • Croatian: Borna Coric, Borna Gojo, Mate Pavic and Nicola Mektic.
  • Italy: Jannik Sinner, Matteo Berrettini, Lorenzo Musetti, Fabio Fognini and Simone Bolelli.
  • Sweden: Mikael Ymer, Elias Ymer, Jonathan Mridha, Karl Friberg and Andre Goransson.

Group B

  • Spain: Carlos Alcaraz, Roberto Bautista Agut, Albert Ramos, Pedro Martínez and Marcel Granollers.
  • Serbian: Miomir Kecmanovic, Filip Krajinovic, Laslo Djere, Dusan Lajovic and Nikola Cacic.
  • South Korea: Soonwoo Kwon, Seong Chan Hong, Jisung Nam and Minkyu Song.
  • Canada: Felix Auger-Aliassime, Vasek Pospisil, Alexis Galarneau and Gabriel Diallo.

Group C

  • Belgium: David Goffin, Zizou Bergs, Michael Geerts, Sander Gille and Joran Vliegen.
  • France: Benjamin Bonzi, Adrian Mannarino, Arthur Rinderknech and Nicolas Mahut
  • Germany: Oscar Otte, Jan-Lennard Struff, Tim Puetz and Kevin Krawietz.
  • Australia: Alex De Minaur, Thanasis Kokkinakis, Matthew Ebden and Max Purcell.

Group D

  • Britain: Cameron Norrie, Daniel Evans, Andy Murray, Joe Salisbury and Neal Skupski.
  • Netherlands: Botic van de Zandschulp, Tallon Griekspoor, Tin van Rijthoven, Wesley Koolhof and Matwe Middelkoop.
  • Kazakhstan: Alexander Bublik, Dmitry Popko, Mikhail Kukushkin, Andrey Golubev and Alexandr Nedovyesov.
  • USA: Taylor Fritz, Frances Tiafoe, Tommy Paul, Jack Sock and Rajeev Ram.

Source: Sporting News

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Sabalenka gave Kyrgios Russian sweets before the exhibition match

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Sabalenka gave Kyrgios Russian sweets before the exhibition match

Belarusian tennis player Aryna Sabalenka gave Australian Nick Kyrgios Russian sweets before the head-to-head match.

The exhibition meeting will take place on December 28 in Dubai.

– Thank you for the gift! Looking forward to tomorrow’s fun! — Kyrgios signed a photo with sweets on the social network.

The upcoming match was called “Battle of the Sexes”, which refers to the confrontation in 1973, in which Billie Jean King defeated Bobby Riggs in three sets – 6:4, 6:3, 6:3.

World number one Sabalenka is 27 years old. During her career, she won 21 WTA singles titles, including four Grand Slam titles. 30-year-old Kyrgios won seven tournaments and is now ranked 672nd in the ATP rankings, his highest position was 13th.

Source: Sportbox

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The tennis player who refused Russia was forced to pay. The decision has already been made

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The tennis player who refused Russia was forced to pay. The decision has already been made

Elina Avanesyan received Armenian citizenship, but she still has to repay her debt to her native country.

Recently, changes of citizenship in Russian women’s tennis have been happening surprisingly often. This is despite the fact that in this sport athletes can easily compete at international competitions. However, tennis players, and to a greater extent female tennis players, still continue to abandon Russia, guided by different goals.

The case with Elina Avanesyan received a rather unexpected continuation. The athlete who left for Armenia must now pay the Russian Tennis Federation (RFF) for failure to fulfill the contract, and this could become an extremely interesting precedent.

Showed promise while representing Russia

This year, five of our tennis players changed their citizenship. The country’s former first racket Daria Kasatkina now represents Australia, and the athlete left with a scandal, forgetting to thank her homeland. In addition to her, Maria Timofeeva, Polina Kudermetova and Kamilla Rakhimova decided to compete for Uzbekistan, and Anastasia Potapova for Austria. The last transition was quite unexpected, because Potapova always declared her love for Russia and often visited the country.

Most of these transitions happened literally in recent weeks and months, so it is too early to draw conclusions about the productivity of the change of citizenship. But Kasatkina hardly won in sports terms. Now she occupies 37th place in the world rankings and, according to the feelings, has lost a lot not only in results, but also in the quality of the game itself.

The situation with Elina Avanesyan burst into the public sphere in August last year. First, she changed the flag in her profile on the WTA website to Armenian, and then the native of Pyatigorsk herself confirmed the fact of the transition. At that time, she was in 58th place in the world rankings and generally showed some promise. She made her debut in senior Grand Slam competitions in 2022, qualifying.

In 2023 and 2024, Elina performed well at Roland Garros, both times making it to the fourth round of the tournament. This was a bid for a breakthrough, or at least gradual progress. Avanesyan also won the ITF W100 series tournament in Wiesbaden in 2023, which is currently her main success in her career.

Will such compensation become a trend?

After moving to Armenia, her results dropped sharply. A year and a half later, Avanesyan is only 118th in the world rankings. This was partly due to health problems, but even without them, the girl’s career was clearly not going uphill. And now Elina has another problem. The Armenian representative was ordered to compensate the losses of the Russian Tennis Federation (RFF) in connection with the failure to fulfill the sports training agreement.

— The FTR received a decision from the National Center for Sports Arbitration (NCSA), which on December 9, 2025 considered the case between the FTR and Avanesyan regarding the FTR’s compensation for losses in connection with Avanesyan’s failure to fulfill the sports training agreement. The NCCA considered the dispute for several months and ruled in favor of the FTR. The tennis player will be obliged to reimburse the FTR for the amounts of losses established by the NCSA, compensation from tennis income provided for in the sports training agreement, and other costs of the FTR, the FTR statement says.

The size of the payments is not disclosed, but it is hardly an insignificant amount. However, it’s not just about finances. Avanesyan’s story may become a precedent when athletes fleeing the country will be required to pay money for changing citizenship.

Now, following the example of the FTR, our other federations can follow the example of the FTR, which will necessarily prescribe the conditions for its termination in the agreement. And this, of course, has its own logic. Of course, no one will prohibit athletes from leaving the country, but such a step will become more responsible. So paying compensation seems like a reasonable option and fair to both parties.

Source: Sportbox

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Tennis player Samsonova announced her engagement to her coach

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Tennis player Samsonova announced her engagement to her coach

Russian tennis player Lyudmila Samsonova announced her engagement to her Italian coach Alessandro Dumitrache.

The athlete posted a photo on social media with an engagement ring, which she captioned: “A new chapter begins.” The tennis player also tagged her lover’s account. Samsonova and Dumitrake have been dating since 2020.

Samsonova is 27 years old. She won the WTA tournaments five times and reached the quarterfinals of Wimbledon in 2025. Samsonova ranks 17th in the world rankings.

Source: Sportbox

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