Belgium edged ahead against France in the opening match at the Davis Cup Finals in Bologna, as organisers confirmed discussions will be held over the tournament’s future format amid the absence of top players from this year’s event.
The 86th-ranked Raphael Collignon battled back to upset French world number 35 Corentin Moutet 2-6 7-5 7-5, leaving team-mate Zizou Bergs with a chance to secure victory against Arthur Rinderknech later.
World number one Carlos Alcaraz announced earlier on Tuesday that he had withdrawn from Spain’s team because of an injury sustained on Sunday at the ATP Finals.
That left Germany’s Alexander Zverev as the only top-10 men’s singles player competing in this year’s Davis Cup showpiece week.
Both Alcaraz and Sinner have suggested they would be in favour of making the Davis Cup a biennial event.
International Tennis Federation (ITF) chief executive Ross Hutchins told BBC Sport he will consult the sport’s top players to explore what the tournament can do to encourage their participation in the final major event of the season.
“The history of this event is a very, very popular team competition which has been – consistently across the last 125 years – a yearly event,” Hutchins said.
“We have a three-year deal in Bologna, which we are very excited about. Malaga worked very well the last few years as a season-end product – top players playing, amazing narratives – so the question is what’s right moving forward.
“I do have very close relations with the top players and the governing bodies, so I’m going to be having discussions about their points of view.
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On the court, Moutet captured the first set against Collignon after racing into a 4-0 lead with a double break of serve.
But the Frenchman had only himself to blame when he was taken to a decider, losing his serve – and the second set – after falling 15-30 behind as an unnecessary trick shot at the net did not come off, with Collignon already walking away from the court.
That proved a costly error as Collignon increased the pressure in the final set, eventually ending Moutet’s resistance in the 12th game after the Belgian had been unable to take his first four break points.
The winning team will play Italy or Austria in the semi-finals on Friday.
On the other half of the draw, Spain meet the Czech Republic, while Argentina face Germany.
Analysis: Absent Britain must show they ‘deserve’ to challenge elite
Great Britain are not involved this week after losing to Japan in February’s first qualifying round.
But Leon Smith’s side gave themselves a chance of reaching next year’s season-closing event by beating Poland in an away eliminator in September.
Doubles specialists Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool, who have recently been crowned year-end world number ones, believe it is imperative that Britain demonstrate they can challenge the elite in 2026.
“We’re an incredibly strong nation and sometimes we get a bit of hate because we have a Slam and the LTA is financially better off than a lot of the federations out there,” Cash told BBC Sport.
“We have a lot of very good players, even below the Davis Cup level, and I think from the standard we’ve got – both singles and doubles – [the Finals] is where we deserve to be. But you have to earn that every year.”
Britain last won the Davis Cup when the talismanic Andy Murray led them to glory in 2015, reaching the semi-finals again in 2019 before quarter-final appearances in 2021 and 2023.
This year’s bid was hampered by British number one Jack Draper, who reached a career-high fourth in the world earlier this season, being ruled out of the Japan tie.
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Source: BBC

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