Australia seal Davis Cup World Group berth with doubles victory

  • Lleyton Hewitt and Chris Guccione win doubles rubber
  • Straight sets win puts Australia in World Group next year
Lleyton Hewitt Chris Guccione Australia Davis Cup
Lleyton Hewitt of Australia serves in his Davis Cup doubles match with Chris Guccione against Denis Istomin and Farrukh Dustov of Uzbekistan. Photograph: Paul Kane/Getty Images

Australia will fight it out against the Davis Cup elite in 2015 after taking an unassailable 3-0 lead in the World Group play-off against Uzbekistan in Perth. Veterans Lleyton Hewitt and Chris Guccione combined to easily dispatch Uzbek pair Denis Istomin and Farrukh Dustov 6-3, 7-6 (7-5), 6-2 in 1 hour 40 minutes at the Cottesloe Tennis Club.

Neither Hewitt nor Guccione dropped their serve on their way to their sixth win as a Davis Cup doubles pairing. The Australians broke Istomin’s serve in just the second game of the match and were never troubled as they closed out the opening set in just 29 minutes.

Both teams traded blows in the second set, highlighted by three perfect services games from Guccione, before Australia prevailed in the tiebreak. Guccione conceded just one point from his booming serve in the first set and was on track to better the feat in the second until he dropped two points in the tiebreak.

Australia could sniff victory when Dustov was broken in the sixth game of the third set before sealing the tie and a place in next year’s World Group just two games later.

Hewitt and rising star Nick Kyrgios recorded comfortable singles victories over Istomin and Dustov on Friday to give Australia the perfect start to the tie. Both players are likely to be rested from Sunday’s reverse singles, with Sam Groth in line to make his Davis Cup debut.

Australia will find out on Thursday who they will play in next year’s opening round of the World Group. Uzbekistan, who are yet to qualify for the World Group in six attempts, will return to the Asia/Oceania zone group in 2015.

Crush of the week: Serena Williams

Her dress sense, flawless manicures and sheer ebullience combine to make Serena Williams irresistible

Serena
'While Venus hold back, Serena jumps in with both feet, and that's all about having the older sister safety net.' Photograph: Corbis

Last week Serena won her 18th Grand Slam singles title at the US Open. This is impressive by any standard, all the more so when you consider her previous ill-health, and her many sidelines: she is also co-owner of an American football team and a qualified nail technician. She's my absolute favourite tennis player to watch, and not just on the women's tour (I'm sure she'd wipe the floor with the male top seeds).

But the thing I like best is her innate "younger sister-ness". Bear with me. While Venus hold back, Serena jumps in with both feet, and that's all about having the older sister safety net. Younger sisters get to be fallible in ways older sisters do not. They are less burdened with rules, and their second-fiddle status means they like to be noticed. (Just look at Solange Knowles.)

Serena's younger-sister-ness shows in her occasional outbursts (which she gets crucified for, whereas that other great American John McEnroe was celebrated for his). It's in her dresses (most recently, a leopard-print stunner) and her flawless manicures (long, embellished). It's in her often vocal frustration at what she sees as a lack of respect. "I can't believe I'm in the second week," she said at the US Open. Why, asked a reporter. "I'm being sarcastic," came the reply. (If Federer had said this, the irony would have been clear.) And it's in her sheer ebullience when she wins: who else would break into an impromptu crip walk after taking gold at the 2012 Olympics?

Full disclosure: I am a younger sister. And, yes, you could argue my love for Serena is a thinly-disguised form of narcissism. But that's OK. Because, as a younger sister, self-absorption is also my right.

Ross Hutchins retires from tennis shortly after comeback from cancer

• Doubles player had Hodgkin lymphoma in 2012
• Hutchins: ‘I look forward to next chapter of my life’
Ross Hutchins
Ross Hutchins alongside mixed doubles partner Chan Yung-jan in their run to the US Open semi-finals. Photograph: Julian Finney/Getty Images

Ross Hutchins has announced his retirement from professional tennis. The 29-year-old – a doubles specialist who returned to tennis in January after time away from the sport recovering from Hodgkin Lymphoma – said the time was right to concentrate on the next stage of his career.

He said: “It is with a heavy heart that today I announce my retirement from professional tennis. After much deliberation I feel it is the right time for me to stop playing professional sport and pursue new goals as I enter the next phase of my career. I feel strong and healthy and I look forward to moving on to the next chapter of my life.”

His illness led to him withdrawing from the Tour in order to receive treatment.

A close friend of the British No1 Andy Murray, Hutchins offered thanks to all who have supported him.

“I have been incredibly fortunate in my tennis career and I am proud of what I have been able to achieve, a lot of which would not have been possible without the support and encouragement of those close to me,” he said.

“Tennis has enabled me to do something which I love every day, to travel the world and along the way form some incredible friendships.”

Hutchins retires with five Tour doubles titles to his name, the last of which came with Colin Fleming at Eastbourne in 2012. He reached the semi-finals in the US Open mixed doubles last month alongside partner Chan Yung-jan.

 


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