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tennis

Tennis Results Players Stats
  Davis Cup solutions

Posted: Mon October 5, 1998

Jon Wertheim Tennis Mailbag Sports Illustrated staff writer Jon Wertheim will answer your tennis questions weekly. Click here to send a question.

Thank you for heeding my call to deliver more questions. Let's dive right in.

The Davis Cup matches used to be a prestigious event, and players were honored to play for their country. What do you think has gone wrong?
—Sandy Parker, Orange, Calif.

Why should the top U.S. stars be shamed into playing Davis Cup? The criticism of Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi and Michael Chang is that they are being selfish by not representing the Stars and Stripes in Davis Cup competition. Has it ever occurred to U.S. fans that it might be the other way around? When the U.S. won the Davis Cup against Russia in 1995, it almost seemed to pass without notice. I don't think Sampras expected a ticker tape parade down Fifth Avenue, but it didn't seem like anybody so much as tooted a kazoo over the victory. Yet if the U.S. loses, the top U.S. players who do not play get all sorts of heat. I think we American tennis fans take the participation of the top players for granted.
—Rudy Fidelino, Watertown, Mass.

  Andre Agassi
Agassi had a legitimate excuse for skipping the Davis Cup semis, but then lashed out inexecusably. (Manny Millan)
Lots of questions about the Davis Cup this week, so I'll answer them in one fell swoop. As far as the U.S. team is concerned there's essentially a vicious cycle. The top players (read: Sampras and Chang) feel the Davis Cup isn't prestigious enough to make it worth their while. Instead of playing for the U.S. and attempting to bolster the Cup's publicity and popularity, they decide not to play. When they're absent, and the USTA has to try and sell tickets with headliners like Todd Martin and Jan-Michael Gambill, the event truly does lose prestige. And downward it goes.

Agassi is a bit less culpable, given his track record. This year the semifinal fell on the same date as his charity event in Vegas, so he begged off. Fine. But then he went on this absolute tirade, excoriating the USTA for not holding the tie on the West Coast, in which case he would have been available, and then refusing to play until the USTA gets a new president. He makes some valid points but, typically, glosses over some key details.

First, everyone knows who sells tickets and who doesn't, and sources have told me that the USTA bent over backwards to try and move the event to Vegas to accommodate tennis' No. 1 showstopper. Because the U.S. advancing to the semis was not a fait accompli until July, no arenas were available on such short notice to hold the September event. Second, the Davis Cup timetable was made eons ago so one wonders why Agassi scheduled his black-tie event for the same weekend as a semifinals tie event.

Anyway, here's the socialist solution: The USTA should do a better job making the players feel as though they're part of the Davis Cup process. The players shouldn't have to find out about the site, for example, in a press release; and they should have some voice in naming the team captain. In return, Messrs. Sampras, Agassi and even Chang should be expected not only to play every round but take part in the tedious—but vital—promotional events. Say this: A team with Sampras, Agassi and Chang would have waxed Italy in front of a packed house.

Who do you think will win the Davis Cup final? Assuming that Italy chooses clay, will Swedish captain Carl-Axel Hageskog pick Jonas Bjorkman and Thomas Johansson again or will he go with any of the three Magnuses—Gustafsson, Norman or Larsson—for the singles matches?

More generally, don't you think the Davis Cup would be better off played every two years or every four years? Playing it less frequently (like the Ryder Cup or World Cup), in my view, would generate a helluva lot more interest among both players and fans.
—Steven Penney, Fredericton, New Brunswick

Even if the Italians play on the slowest clay allowed by law, it's hard to imagine them springing another upset. Just consider that there are six Swedes ranked higher than Italy's best player, No. 39 Andrea Gaudenzi. After Bjorkman and Johansson played so well against Spain's Carlos Moya and Alex Corretja in the semis, I don't think Hageskog will be tinkeing with his lineup.

I generally agree that the event would enjoy greater prestige if it were held every other year, as the Ryder Cup is. The problem, however, is that a lot countries' tennis federations rely on Davis Cup revenues to fund junior programs, etc., and would be hobbled if the event were only every other year.

I have a question about '97 French Open champion Iva Majoli: What's happened to her? Ever since she won the French, her game has fallen apart and she's dropped in the rankings. I am a fan of hers, but have been frustrated by her constant losing for the past year. Is there any hope for her?
—Keith Jacobsen, Mitchell, S.Dak.

She's hanging out with Mickey Rourke and Vanilla Ice in the "Where are They Now?" room. Seriously, Majoli has been in a monstrous tailspin since winning the French last year. Her results were so bad, in fact, that she fell out of the top 20 and Reebok terminated her endorsement contract. At a Fed Cup match in Croatia a few months ago, she lost 6-0, 6-1 to Amanda Hopmans of the Netherlands, a player not even ranked in the top 100.

Is there hope for a return to respectability? Sure. If Majoli overcomes this crisis of confidence and takes more chances on the court, she ought to be just fine. Besides, just think of how few points she has to defend next year.

What do you think of Anna Kournikova's game? Most of us red-blooded American men have a hard time looking past her obvious beauty, but do you think she is a legitimate top 10 player or just a beautiful young woman who happens to play professional tennis?
—Phil O'Donoghue, Florence, Mass.

The real question is, How does she perceives herself? Kournikova's new agency, Advantage International, is eager for her to lose the haughty-hottie shtick and promote herself as an athlete. When she's on her game, it's a wonder why, even at her young age, she's not a top 10 player. But one gets the distinct feeling that right now she wouldn't trade places with, say, Lindsay Davenport for all the Grand Slams in the world.

Lindsay Davenport's victory at the U.S. Open means that she is no longer the best player without a Slam victory. Who has that particular distinction now? I would venture either Anke Huber or Mary Joe Fernandez. Any other candidates? Also, how do you see their chances?
—Alvin Jiminez, Aguadilla, Puerto Rico

I'd say that hot potato is now in Venus Williams' hands. The other top candidate is Patty Schnyder, whom Williams just beat last weekend in the finals of the Grand Slam Cup. Neither Williams nor Schnyder has turned 20, and I'm sure both will shed this distinction within the next few years. As for veterans, Huber is up there along with, say, Irina Spirlea and Amanda Coetzer. I'm not sure I like any of their chances. Mary Joe's only chance—a slim one at that—is on clay. Huber's best days are behind her. Ditto for Coetzer. And Spirlea is too erratic and temperamental to go undefeated for two weeks.

As for the men, it's all Rios, all the time. After him, I'd go with Corretja.

Don't you agree that 'exhibition' events such as the Grand Slam Cup which pay obscene amounts of cash even to the losers do not benefit the game? And what's with giving Andre Agassi a wild card? Any opinions on how to motivate these lotto winners?
—Nathan Scantlebury, Barbados

Seriously, Nathan: You don't think the game of tennis benefitted from Cedric Pioline showing up for the Grand Slam Cup with a groin injury, losing 6-0, 6-0 to Agassi in 34 minutes, collecting his $100,000 first-round loser's check, and then going home?

How could you answer a question about age and its relationship to Grand Slam potential without mentioning MARTINA?!?!? (And I don't mean Hingis.)
—Brent E. Adams, Chicago

In that case, a belated MARTINA?!?!? (Truth is, I was only referring to current players.)

I was and still am a big Gabriela Sabatini fan. I was saddened by her premature retirement from the game. What are her chances for induction into the Hall of Fame? Will one Grand Slam championship and numerous other titles suffice?
—Alex Anania, Jackson Heights, N.Y.

As Pat Cash can attest, it's hard to get into the Hall of Fame when you've only won one Grand Slam. On the other hand, Gabby won 27 career titles, made the semis or better at 18 Slams and, perhaps, most important, was immensely good for the game. As was the case when she walked on the court, her chances of getting inducted are completely up in the air.

I lost all respect for Agassi at the U.S. Open after his childish match with Karol Kucera. You could see the impact Agassi's criticisms had on Kucera's almost-perfect game. As John McEnroe said on TV during the match, do you think players have to do whatever it takes out there to win?
—Kap, Toronto, Ontario

I realize that a certain level of gamesmanship is part of the equation, but I think Agassi's showmanship and grandstanding was totally beyond the pale. The world's most popular player ought to be above mocking his opponent (particularly a non-English-speaking Slovakian) who just so happens to be beating him two sets to love. Other players will complain that when the cameras are off, Agassi can be something of a bully, and he certainly showed glimpses of his underbelly against Kucera. That said, McEnroe doesn't have much of a leg to stand on when he laments a player "doing whatever it takes to win" even if it flies in the face of sportsmanship.

Here is my question: Do you agree that it is wrong for Anna Kournikova to be dating someone so much older than her? Do you agree that it would be better for her to date someone more her age, like, say, me (I'm 21)? If you do, do you have her phone number? Thanks for your time...
—Ehud Knoll, State College, Pa.

With all due respect, no one named Ehud who frequents the Internet is going to hang with Anna. Even if you are 21. Here's my best suggestion: Lock the door to your dorm room and check out www.annak.com. And don't worry: You won't go blind.

Send a question to Jon Wertheim, and check back the beginning of each week to read more of his answers.  

Related information
Previous Mailbags
September 29: U.S. stars ought to be ashamed
September 5: Rios still has some maturing to do
August 24: Tanks for coming
August 18: Can Davenport conquer the Open?
August 10: Ivanisevic uses his head
August 3: A tennis grab (Mail)bag
July 27: Suddenly, Agassi re-enters the picture
July 21: Graf's comeback easy to root for
July 8: Novotna, Sampras earned the right to celebrate
June 29: Waiting out the rain
June 22: Sampras, Graf still have what it takes
June 16: Who will rule Centre Court?
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