The Finals, formerly known as World Group, was the highest level of Davis Cup competition in 2021. It was held on indoor hard courts at three venues in Innsbruck, Austria, Madrid, Spain and Turin, Italy. The 2020 edition was originally scheduled to take place from 23 until 29 November 2020. However, on 26 June 2020, ITF announced that 2020 Finals would take place from 22 until 28 November 2021 due to coronavirus pandemic and be named 2021 Davis Cup Finals.[1] On 18 January 2021, ITF announced that the Finals would be expanded over 11 days, from 25 November to 5 December 2021.[2] The ties were contested in a best-of-three rubbers format and played on one day. There were two singles followed by a doubles.[3] Spain were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the round-robin stage. The Russian Tennis Federation won the title, defeating Croatia in the final. Andrey Rublev was named the Most Valuable Player of the tournament after going 6–1 in both singles and doubles.[4][5]

2021 Davis Cup Finals
Date25 November–5 December 2021
Edition2nd
Draw18 teams
SurfaceHard indoor
LocationInnsbruck, Austria
Madrid, Spain
Turin, Italy
VenueOlympiahalle
Madrid Arena
Pala Alpitour
Champions
Russian Tennis Federation
← 2019 · Davis Cup · 2022 →

Participating teams

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18 nations take part in the Finals.[6] The qualification was as follows:

  • 4 semifinalists of the previous edition
  • 2 wild card teams (announced by ITF on 23 November 2019 as France and Serbia)[7]
  • 12 winners of the qualifying round, in March 2020

Overview

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H = Host nation, TH = Title holder, 2019F = Finalist from the 2019 tournament, 2019SF = Semi-finalists from the 2019 tournament, WC = Wild card

Participating teams
 
Australia
 
Austria (H)
 
Canada (2019F)
 
Colombia
 
Croatia
 
Czech Republic
 
Ecuador
 
France (WC)
 
Germany
 
Great Britain (2019SF)
 
Hungary
 
Italy (H)
 
Kazakhstan
 
RTF (2019SF)[Note RUS]
 
Serbia (WC)
 
Spain (H, TH)
 
Sweden
 
United States
  1. ^
    Note RUS: In accordance with the ban by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and a December 2020 decision by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), the team from Russia was not permitted to use the Russian name, flag, or anthem; it participated in the 2021 Davis Cup Finals as the team of the Russian Tennis Federation (RTF), and used the flag of the RTF.

Seeds

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The seedings were based on the Davis Cup Ranking of 9 March.[6] Spain, as 2019 champions, are seeded No. 1 and were drawn into Pool A. Canada, as 2019 runners-up, are seeded No. 2 and were drawn into Pool B. The four other highest-ranked nations (France, Croatia, USA and Serbia) are seeded 3–6. The nations in pot 2 were drawn randomly into position 2 and the nations in pot 3 were drawn randomly into position 3.[8]

  1.   Spain (Round robin)
  2.   Canada (Round robin)
  3.   France (Round robin)
  4.   Croatia (Final)
  5.   United States (Round robin)
  6.   Serbia (Semifinals)
  7.   Germany (Semifinals)
  8.   Italy (Quarterfinals)
  9.   Great Britain (Quarterfinals)
  10.   Australia (Round robin)
  11.   Kazakhstan (Quarterfinals)
  12.   RTF (Champion)
  13.   Sweden (Quarterfinals)
  14.   Austria (Round robin)
  15.   Czech Republic (Round robin)
  16.   Colombia (Round robin)
  17.   Hungary (Round robin)
  18.   Ecuador (Round robin)

Team nominations

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SR = Singles ranking, DR = Doubles ranking. Rankings are as of 22 November 2021.[9][10]

  Australia
Player SR DR
Alex de Minaur 34 133
Alexei Popyrin 61 336
John Millman 72 197
Alex Bolt 135 743
John Peers 13
Captain: Lleyton Hewitt
  Austria
Player SR DR
Dennis Novak 118 731
Jurij Rodionov 139 408
Gerald Melzer 287 476
Oliver Marach 45
Philipp Oswald 52
Captain: Stefan Koubek
  Canada
Player SR DR
Vasek Pospisil 133 154
Brayden Schnur 234 280
Steven Diez 264 548
Peter Polansky 277 159
Captain: Frank Dancevic
  Colombia
Player SR DR
Daniel Elahi Galán 111 577
Nicolás Mejía 275 415
Cristian Rodríguez 442 214
Juan Sebastián Cabal 10
Robert Farah 10
Captain: Alejandro Falla
  Croatia
Player SR DR
Marin Čilić 30 419
Nino Serdarušić 242 233
Borna Gojo 276 449
Mate Pavić 1
Nikola Mektić 2
Captain: Vedran Martić
  Czech Republic
Player SR DR
Jiří Veselý 82 334
Jiří Lehečka 138 232
Zdeněk Kolář 140 120
Tomáš Macháč 143 472
Captain: Jaroslav Navrátil
  Ecuador
Player SR DR
Emilio Gómez 149 363
Roberto Quiroz 291 182
Diego Hidalgo 581 166
Cayetano March 701 552
Gonzalo Escobar 823 39
Captain: Raúl Viver
  France
Player SR DR
Arthur Rinderknech 58 131
Adrian Mannarino 71 162
Richard Gasquet 86
Pierre-Hugues Herbert 110 8
Nicolas Mahut 400 5
Captain: Sébastien Grosjean
  Germany
Player SR DR
Jan-Lennard Struff 51 68
Dominik Koepfer 54 105
Peter Gojowczyk 85 525
Kevin Krawietz 852 14
Tim Pütz 1196 18
Captain: Michael Kohlmann
  Great Britain
Player SR DR
Cameron Norrie 12 148
Dan Evans 25 59
Liam Broady 128 243
Joe Salisbury 3
Neal Skupski 20
Captain: Leon Smith
  Hungary
Player SR DR
Márton Fucsovics 40 311
Attila Balázs 131 900
Zsombor Piros 282 1432
Fábián Marozsán 359 566
Péter Nagy 765 508
Captain: Gábor Köves
  Italy
Player SR DR
Jannik Sinner 10 130
Lorenzo Sonego 27 139
Fabio Fognini 37 107
Lorenzo Musetti 59 366
Simone Bolelli 885 25
Captain: Filippo Volandri
  Kazakhstan
Player SR DR
Alexander Bublik 36 48
Dmitry Popko 178 444
Mikhail Kukushkin 183 128
Aleksandr Nedovyesov 534 72
Andrey Golubev 937 28
Captain: Yuri Schukin
  RTF
Player SR DR
Daniil Medvedev 2 275
Andrey Rublev 5 74
Aslan Karatsev 18 90
Karen Khachanov 29 168
Evgeny Donskoy 173 646
Captain: Shamil Tarpishchev
  Serbia
Player SR DR
Novak Djokovic 1 251
Dušan Lajović 33 205
Filip Krajinović 42 290
Miomir Kecmanović 68 274
Nikola Ćaćić 1540 36
Captain: Viktor Troicki
  Spain
Player SR DR
Pablo Carreño Busta 20 196
Albert Ramos Viñolas 45
Pedro Martínez 60 88
Feliciano López 106 125
Marcel Granollers 312 7
Captain: Sergi Bruguera
  Sweden
Player SR DR
Mikael Ymer 93 1449
Elias Ymer 171 391
Jonathan Mridha 511 822
André Göransson 64
Robert Lindstedt 184
Captain: Robin Söderling
  United States
Player SR DR
John Isner 24 203
Reilly Opelka 26 146
Frances Tiafoe 38 161
Jack Sock 147 150
Rajeev Ram 4
Captain: Mardy Fish

Format

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The 18 teams were divided in six round robin groups of three teams each. The six group winners plus the two second-placed teams with the best records based on percentage of matches won (followed by percentage of sets won and then percentage of games won), qualified for the quarterfinals.[11]

Date Round Number of teams
25 November – 28 November Round robin 18 (6 groups of 3 teams)
29 November – 2 December Quarterfinals 8 (6 group winners + 2 best second place)
3 December – 4 December Semifinals 4
5 December Final 2 (automatically qualified for 2022 Davis Cup Finals)

Group stage

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Qualified for the Knockout stage
Eliminated

Overview

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T = Ties, M = Matches, S = Sets

Group Winner Runner-up Third
Nation T M S Nation T M S Nation T M S
A   RTF 2–0 5–1 11–5   Spain 1–1 4–2 9–7   Ecuador 0–2 0–6 4–12
B   Kazakhstan 2–0 5–1 10–5   Sweden 1–1 4–2 9–4   Canada 0–2 0–6 2–12
C   Great Britain 2–0 4–2 8–5   France 1–1 3–3 6–8   Czech Republic 0–2 2–4 7–8
D   Croatia 2–0 5–1 11–3   Australia 1–1 2–4 6–10   Hungary 0–2 2–4 6–10
E   Italy 2–0 4–2 9–5   Colombia 1–1 3–3 8–8   United States 0–2 2–4 5–9
F   Germany 2–0 4–2 8–5   Serbia 1–1 4–2 9–6   Austria 0–2 1–5 4–10

Group A

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Pos. Country Ties Matches Sets Sets % Games Games %
1   RTF 2–0 5–1 11–5 69% 86–60 59%
2   Spain 1–1 4–2 9–7 56% 83–81 51%
3   Ecuador 0–2 0–6 4–12 25% 65–93 41%

Spain vs. Ecuador

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Spain
3
Madrid
26 November 2021[12]
 
Ecuador
0
1 2 3
1  
 
Feliciano López
Roberto Quiroz
6
3
6
3
   
2  
 
Pablo Carreño Busta
Emilio Gómez
5
7
6
3
77
65
 
3  
 
Pablo Carreño Busta / Marcel Granollers
Gonzalo Escobar / Diego Hidalgo
6
4
65
77
77
62
 

RTF vs. Ecuador

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RTF
3
Madrid
27 November 2021[13]
 
Ecuador
0
1 2 3
1  
 
Andrey Rublev
Roberto Quiroz
6
3
4
6
6
1
 
2  
 
Daniil Medvedev
Emilio Gómez
6
0
6
2
   
3  
 
Aslan Karatsev / Andrey Rublev
Gonzalo Escobar / Diego Hidalgo
6
4
4
6
6
4
 

Spain vs. RTF

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Spain
1
Madrid
28 November 2021[14]
 
RTF
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Feliciano López
Andrey Rublev
2
6
6
3
6
4
 
2  
 
Pablo Carreño Busta
Daniil Medvedev
2
6
63
77
   
3  
 
Marcel Granollers / Feliciano López
Aslan Karatsev / Andrey Rublev
6
4
2
6
4
6
 

Group B

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Pos. Country Ties Matches Sets Sets % Games Games %
1   Kazakhstan 2–0 5–1 10–5 67% 86–64 57%
2   Sweden 1–1 4–2 9–4 69% 66–60 52%
3   Canada 0–2 0–6 2–12 14% 59–87 40%

Canada vs. Sweden

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Canada
0
Madrid
25 November 2021[15]
 
Sweden
3
1 2 3
1  
 
Steven Diez
Elias Ymer
4
6
2
6
   
2  
 
Vasek Pospisil
Mikael Ymer
4
6
4
6
   
3  
 
Vasek Pospisil / Brayden Schnur
André Göransson / Robert Lindstedt
65
77
4
6
   

Kazakhstan vs. Sweden

edit
 
Kazakhstan
2
Madrid
27 November 2021[16]
 
Sweden
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Mikhail Kukushkin
Elias Ymer
3
6
64
77
   
2  
 
Alexander Bublik
Mikael Ymer
3
6
6
4
6
0
 
3  
 
Andrey Golubev / Aleksandr Nedovyesov
André Göransson / Robert Lindstedt
6
3
6
3
   

Canada vs. Kazakhstan

edit
 
Canada
0
Madrid
28 November 2021[17]
 
Kazakhstan
3
1 2 3
1  
 
Brayden Schnur
Mikhail Kukushkin
3
6
77
65
5
7
 
2  
 
Vasek Pospisil
Alexander Bublik
2
6
66
78
   
3  
 
Peter Polansky / Brayden Schnur
Andrey Golubev / Aleksandr Nedovyesov
4
6
78
66
1
6
 

Group C

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Pos. Country Ties Matches Sets Sets % Games Games %
1   Great Britain 2–0 4–2 8–5 62% 64–56 53%
2   France 1–1 3–3 6–8 43% 70–70 50%
3   Czech Republic 0–2 2–4 7–8 47% 66–74 47%

France vs. Czech Republic

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France
2
Innsbruck
25 November 2021[18]
 
Czech Republic
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Richard Gasquet
Tomáš Macháč
63
77
2
6
   
2  
 
Adrian Mannarino
Jiří Veselý
61
77
6
4
6
2
 
3  
 
Pierre-Hugues Herbert / Nicolas Mahut
Tomáš Macháč / Jiří Lehečka
3
6
6
4
6
3
 

France vs. Great Britain

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France
1
Innsbruck
27 November 2021[19]
 
Great Britain
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Adrian Mannarino
Dan Evans
5
7
4
6
   
2  
 
Arthur Rinderknech
Cameron Norrie
2
6
68
710
   
3  
 
Nicolas Mahut / Arthur Rinderknech
Joe Salisbury / Neal Skupski
6
1
6
4
   

Great Britain vs. Czech Republic

edit
 
Great Britain
2
Innsbruck
28 November 2021[20]
 
Czech Republic
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Dan Evans
Tomáš Macháč
2
6
5
7
   
2  
 
Cameron Norrie
Jiří Lehečka
6
1
2
6
6
1
 
3  
 
Joe Salisbury / Neal Skupski
Tomáš Macháč / Jiří Veselý
6
4
6
2
   

Group D

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Pos. Country Ties Matches Sets Sets % Games Games %
1   Croatia 2–0 5–1 11–3 79% 83–60 58%
2   Australia 1–1 2–4 6–10 38% 74–89 45%
3   Hungary 0–2 2–4 6–10 38% 79–87 48%

Croatia vs. Australia

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Croatia
3
Turin
25 November 2021[21]
 
Australia
0
1 2 3
1  
 
Borna Gojo
Alexei Popyrin
77
65
7
5
   
2  
 
Marin Čilić
Alex de Minaur
6
1
5
7
6
4
 
3  
 
Nikola Mektić / Mate Pavić
Alex de Minaur / John Peers
6
3
6
1
   

Australia vs. Hungary

edit
 
Australia
2
Turin
27 November 2021[22]
 
Hungary
1
1 2 3
1  
 
John Millman
Zsombor Piros
6
4
4
6
3
6
 
2  
 
Alex de Minaur
Márton Fucsovics
7
5
2
6
77
62
 
3  
 
Alex Bolt / John Peers
Fábián Marozsán / Zsombor Piros
6
3
611
713
6
3
 

Croatia vs. Hungary

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Croatia
2
Turin
28 November 2021[23]
 
Hungary
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Nino Serdarušić
Fábián Marozsán
6
4
6
4
   
2  
 
Marin Čilić
Zsombor Piros
6
4
5
7
4
6
 
3  
 
Nikola Mektić / Mate Pavić
Fábián Marozsán / Péter Nagy
78
66
6
2
   

Group E

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Pos. Country Ties Matches Sets Sets % Games Games %
1   Italy 2–0 4–2 9–5 64% 79–60 57%
2   Colombia 1–1 3–3 8–8 50% 79–78 50%
3   United States 0–2 2–4 5–9 36% 56–76 42%

United States vs. Italy

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United States
1
Turin
26 November 2021[24]
 
Italy
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Reilly Opelka
Lorenzo Sonego
3
6
64
77
   
2  
 
John Isner
Jannik Sinner
2
6
0
6
   
3  
 
Rajeev Ram / Jack Sock
Fabio Fognini / Lorenzo Musetti
77
65
6
2
   

Italy vs. Colombia

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Italy
2
Turin
27 November 2021[25]
 
Colombia
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Lorenzo Sonego
Nicolás Mejía
65
77
6
4
6
2
 
2  
 
Jannik Sinner
Daniel Elahi Galán
7
5
6
0
   
3  
 
Fabio Fognini / Jannik Sinner
Juan Sebastián Cabal / Robert Farah
2
6
7
5
66
78
 

United States vs. Colombia

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United States
1
Turin
28 November 2021[26]
 
Colombia
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Frances Tiafoe
Nicolás Mejía
4
6
6
3
79
67
 
2  
 
John Isner
Daniel Elahi Galán
3
6
6
3
65
77
 
3  
 
Reilly Opelka / Jack Sock
Juan Sebastián Cabal / Robert Farah
0
3
    retired
 

Note: Cabal/Farah's retirement victory over Opelka/Sock counted as a 6–0, 6–0 win.

Group F

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Pos. Country Ties Matches Sets Sets % Games Games %
1   Germany 2–0 4–2 8–5 62% 67–69 49%
2   Serbia 1–1 4–2 9–6 60% 86–73 54%
3   Austria 0–2 1–5 4–10 29% 66–77 46%

Serbia vs. Austria

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Serbia
3
Innsbruck
26 November 2021[27]
 
Austria
0
1 2 3
1  
 
Dušan Lajović
Gerald Melzer
77
65
3
6
7
5
 
2  
 
Novak Djokovic
Dennis Novak
6
3
6
2
   
3  
 
Nikola Ćaćić / Filip Krajinović
Oliver Marach / Philipp Oswald
77
64
4
6
6
3
 

Serbia vs. Germany

edit
 
Serbia
1
Innsbruck
27 November 2021[28]
 
Germany
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Filip Krajinović
Dominik Koepfer
64
77
4
6
   
2  
 
Novak Djokovic
Jan-Lennard Struff
6
2
6
4
   
3  
 
Nikola Ćaćić / Novak Djokovic
Kevin Krawietz / Tim Pütz
65
77
6
3
65
77
 

Germany vs. Austria

edit
 
Germany
2
Innsbruck
28 November 2021[29]
 
Austria
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Dominik Koepfer
Jurij Rodionov
1
6
5
7
   
2  
 
Jan-Lennard Struff
Dennis Novak
7
5
6
4
   
3  
 
Kevin Krawietz / Tim Pütz
Oliver Marach / Philipp Oswald
6
3
6
4
   

Knockout stage

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Bracket

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QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
2 December, Madrid
12  RTF2
4 December, Madrid
13  Sweden0
12  RTF2
30 November, Innsbruck
7  Germany1
9  Great Britain1
5 December, Madrid
7  Germany2
12  RTF2
29 November, Turin
4  Croatia0
8  Italy1
3 December, Madrid
4  Croatia2
4  Croatia2
1 December, Madrid
6  Serbia1
6  Serbia2
11  Kazakhstan1

Quarterfinals

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Italy vs. Croatia

edit
 
Italy
1
Turin
29 November 2021[30]
 
Croatia
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Lorenzo Sonego
Borna Gojo
62
77
6
2
2
6
 
2  
 
Jannik Sinner
Marin Čilić
3
6
77
64
6
3
 
3  
 
Fabio Fognini / Jannik Sinner
Nikola Mektić / Mate Pavić
3
6
4
6
   

Great Britain vs. Germany

edit
 
Great Britain
1
Innsbruck
30 November 2021[31]
 
Germany
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Dan Evans
Peter Gojowczyk
6
2
6
1
   
2  
 
Cameron Norrie
Jan-Lennard Struff
66
78
6
3
2
6
 
3  
 
Joe Salisbury / Neal Skupski
Kevin Krawietz / Tim Pütz
610
712
65
77
   

Serbia vs. Kazakhstan

edit
 
Serbia
2
Madrid
1 December 2021[32]
 
Kazakhstan
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Miomir Kecmanović
Mikhail Kukushkin
65
77
6
4
611
713
 
2  
 
Novak Djokovic
Alexander Bublik
6
3
6
4
   
3  
 
Nikola Ćaćić / Novak Djokovic
Andrey Golubev / Aleksandr Nedovyesov
6
2
2
6
6
3
 

RTF vs. Sweden

edit
 
RTF
2
Madrid
2 December 2021[33]
 
Sweden
0
1 2 3
1  
 
Andrey Rublev
Elias Ymer
6
2
5
7
77
63
 
2  
 
Daniil Medvedev
Mikael Ymer
6
4
6
4
   
3  
 
Aslan Karatsev / Andrey Rublev
André Göransson / Robert Lindstedt
      not
played

Semifinals

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Croatia vs. Serbia

edit
 
Croatia
2
Madrid
3 December 2021[34]
 
Serbia
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Borna Gojo
Dušan Lajović
4
6
6
3
6
2
 
2  
 
Marin Čilić
Novak Djokovic
4
6
2
6
   
3  
 
Nikola Mektić / Mate Pavić
Novak Djokovic / Filip Krajinović
7
5
6
1
   

RTF vs. Germany

edit
 
RTF
2
Madrid
4 December 2021[35]
 
Germany
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Andrey Rublev
Dominik Koepfer
6
4
6
0
   
2  
 
Daniil Medvedev
Jan-Lennard Struff
6
4
6
4
   
3  
 
Aslan Karatsev / Karen Khachanov
Kevin Krawietz / Tim Pütz
6
4
3
6
4
6
 

Final

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RTF vs. Croatia

edit
 
RTF
2
Madrid
5 December 2021[36]
 
Croatia
0
1 2 3
1  
 
Andrey Rublev
Borna Gojo
6
4
77
65
   
2  
 
Daniil Medvedev
Marin Čilić
79
67
6
2
   
3  
 
Aslan Karatsev / Andrey Rublev
Nikola Mektić / Mate Pavić
      not
played

References

edit
  1. ^ "2020 Davis Cup Finals to be postponed until 2021". Daviscup.com. Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  2. ^ "Davis Cup Finals: 2021 event expanded to 11 days to 'ease burden on players'". BBC Sport. 18 January 2021. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  3. ^ "Davis Cup Format". Daviscup.com. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
  4. ^ "Davis Cup: Daniil Medvedev and Andrey Rublev secure title for Russian Tennis Federation over Croatia in Madrid". Sky Sports. 6 December 2021. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
  5. ^ "Russia win Davis Cup to seal international team double". RTE Sport. 5 December 2021. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
  6. ^ a b "Line-up confirmed for 2020 Davis Cup Finals". Daviscup.com. 8 March 2020.
  7. ^ "Wild cards announced for 2020 Finals". Daviscup.com. 23 November 2019.
  8. ^ "Seeds announced for Davis Cup Finals 2020". Daviscup.com. 9 March 2020.
  9. ^ "Djokovic, Medvedev headline team nominations for Davis Cup by Rakuten Finals". Daviscupfinals.com. Archived from the original on 25 October 2021. Retrieved 25 October 2021.
  10. ^ "Davis Cup – Draw & Results". Daviscup.com. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  11. ^ "2020 ITF Davis Cup Regulations" (PDF). International Tennis Federation. Retrieved 10 March 2020.
  12. ^ "Spain v Ecuador". Daviscup.com.
  13. ^ "Russian Tennis Federation v Ecuador". Daviscup.com.
  14. ^ "Spain v Russian Tennis Federation". Daviscup.com.
  15. ^ "Canada v Sweden". Daviscup.com.
  16. ^ "Kazakhstan v Sweden". Daviscup.com.
  17. ^ "Canada v Kazakhstan". Daviscup.com.
  18. ^ "France v Czech Republic". Daviscup.com.
  19. ^ "France v Great Britain". Daviscup.com.
  20. ^ "Great Britain v Czech Republic". Daviscup.com.
  21. ^ "Croatia v Australia". Daviscup.com.
  22. ^ "Australia v Hungary". Daviscup.com.
  23. ^ "Croatia v Hungary". Daviscup.com.
  24. ^ "USA v Italy". Daviscup.com.
  25. ^ "Italy v Colombia". Daviscup.com.
  26. ^ "USA v Colombia". Daviscup.com.
  27. ^ "Serbia v Austria". Daviscup.com.
  28. ^ "Serbia v Germany". Daviscup.com.
  29. ^ "Germany v Austria". Daviscup.com.
  30. ^ "Italy v Croatia". Daviscup.com.
  31. ^ "Great Britain v Germany". Daviscup.com.
  32. ^ "Serbia v Kazakhstan". Daviscup.com.
  33. ^ "Russian Tennis Federation v Sweden". Daviscup.com.
  34. ^ "Croatia v Serbia". Daviscup.com.
  35. ^ "Russian Tennis Federation v Germany". Daviscup.com.
  36. ^ "Russian Tennis Federation v Croatia". Daviscup.com.
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