1978_Davis_Cup

1978 Davis Cup

1978 Davis Cup

1978 edition of the Davis Cup


The 1978 Davis Cup was the 67th edition of the Davis Cup, the most important tournament between national teams in men's tennis. 50 teams entered the competition, 29 in the Europe Zone, 10 in the Americas Zone, and 11 in the Eastern Zone.

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The United States defeated Chile in the Americas Inter-Zonal final, Australia defeated New Zealand in the Eastern Zone final, and Great Britain and Sweden were the winners of the two Europe Zones, defeating Czechoslovakia and Hungary respectively.

In the Inter-Zonal Zone, the United States defeated Sweden and Great Britain defeated Australia in the semifinals. The United States then defeated Great Britain in the final to win their 25th title overall and their first since 1972. The final was held at the Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California, United States on 8–10 December.[1][2]

Political controversy

The competition was significantly marked by political issues: Canada, Mexico, Venezuela, and the Caribbean/West Indies all withdrew from the North & Central America Zone due to the continued presence of South Africa in the competition, despite continued international condemnation of their government's apartheid policies.[3]

The North & Central America Zone final between the United States and South Africa, held at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, attracted crowds of up to 5,000 protesters each day, and efforts by the South African side to appease critics by nominating Peter Lamb as its first "coloured" player were derided by some as tokenism, given he did not actually play during the tie and was a student enrolled at Vanderbilt University at the time of the tournament.[4][5][6]

The Soviet Union continued to be barred for competing following its refusal to compete against Chile in the 1976 semifinals and its promised refusal to compete against South Africa.

Americas Zone

North & Central America Zone

South America Zone

Preliminary rounds

Main Draw

Semifinals
18–20 December 1977
Final
17–19 March
Santiago, Chile
 Chile5
Santiago, Chile (clay)
 Uruguay0
 Chile3
 Argentina2
bye
 Argentina

Americas Inter-Zonal Final

Chile vs. United States

More information Chile 2, United States 3 ...

Eastern Zone

Preliminary rounds

Main Draw

Quarterfinals
9–12 December 1977
Semifinals
19–22 January
Final
24–26 February
 Australia
Tokyo, Japan (clay)
bye
 Australia5
Tokyo, Japan
 Japan0
 Indonesia1
Adelaide, Australia (grass)
 Japan4
 Australia4
Coimbatore, India
 New Zealand0
 South Korea1
New Delhi, India
 India4
 India1
 New Zealand4
bye
 New Zealand

Final

Australia vs. New Zealand

More information Australia 4, New Zealand 0 ...

Europe Zone

Zone A

Preliminary rounds

Main Draw

Quarterfinals
16–18 June
Semifinals
13–15 July
Final
15–17 September
 France
Paris, France (clay)
bye
 France2
Bristol, United Kingdom (grass)
 Great Britain3
 Great Britain5
Eastbourne, United Kingdom (grass)
 Austria0
 Great Britain5
Prague, Czechoslovakia (clay)
 Czechoslovakia0
 Czechoslovakia3
Prague, Czechoslovakia (clay)
 Poland2
 Czechoslovakia5
 Romania0
bye
 Romania

Final

Great Britain vs. Czechoslovakia

More information Great Britain 5, Czechoslovakia 0 ...

Zone B

Pre-qualifying round

Pre-qualifying round
Casablanca, Morocco
 Morocco5
 Turkey0

Preliminary rounds

Main Draw

Quarterfinals
13–18 June
Semifinals
13–16 July
Final
15–17 September
 Spain
Båstad, Sweden (clay)
bye
 Spain2
Belgrade, Yugoslavia (clay)
 Sweden3
 Yugoslavia2
Båstad, Sweden (clay)
 Sweden3
 Sweden3
Budapest, Hungary
 Hungary1
 Hungary3
Budapest, Hungary
 West Germany2
 Hungary4
 Italy1
bye
 Italy

Final

Sweden vs. Hungary

More information Sweden 3, Hungary 1 ...

Inter-Zonal Zone

Draw

Semifinals
6–8 October
Final
8–10 December
Gothenburg, Sweden (indoor carpet)
EUR-B Sweden2
Rancho Mirage, CA, United States (hard)
AME United States3
AME United States4
London, United Kingdom (indoor carpet)
EUR-A Great Britain1
EAS Australia2
EUR-A Great Britain3

Semifinals

Sweden vs. United States

More information Sweden 2, United States 3 ...

Great Britain vs. Australia

More information Great Britain 3, Australia 2 ...

Final

United States vs. Great Britain

More information United States 4, Great Britain 1 ...

References

  1. Bud Collins (2010). The Bud Collins History of Tennis (2nd ed.). [New York]: New Chapter Press. pp. 495–496, 499. ISBN 978-0942257700.
  2. "African Activist Archive". Africanactivist.msu.edu. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  3. Jim Jerome (20 March 1978). "Apartheid Critics Say He's Merely a Token, but Peter Lamb's Davis Cup Runneth Over". People.com. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  4. "The Crisis". Retrieved 26 October 2019 via Google Books.
  5. "Sweden v Hungary". daviscup.com.

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