Davis Cup by Rakuten Finals icon

Davis Cup by Rakuten Finals

2.0.0 for Android
3.6 | 10,000+ Installs | Reviews

Davis Cup Finals

⚠️ You need 9Apps App to install .XAPK File. How to install XAPK?

Description of Davis Cup by Rakuten Finals

Discover the official Davis Cup by Rakuten Finals app and get all the information on the Qualifiers! Follow the action across the 12 venues around the world on 6–7 March.
Key features include:
- All of the Davis Cup Qualifiers: live scores, matches, statistics
- Official content from the event: news, schedule, teams, players
Enjoy the World Cup of Tennis! 🎾
Davis Cup by Rakuten is the World Cup of Tennis. Founded in 1900, it is the largest annual international team competition in sport, with 142 nations entered in 2020. Starting in 2019, the new format brings together the top 18 nations contesting the Davis Cup Finals in a week-long season finale to crown the Davis Cup champions. Like 2019, the 2020 Davis Cup Finals will be held in Madrid.
Twenty-four teams will compete in the Davis Cup by Rakuten Qualifiers 2020 on 6–7 March, with the ties played under a home-and-away format: Croatia, India, Belgium, Hungary, Argentina, Colombia, United States, Uzbekistan, Australia, Brazil, Italy, the Republic of Korea, Germany, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Netherlands, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Austria, Uruguay, Japan, Ecuador, Sweden and Chile.
The 12 winning nations will advance to the Davis Cup Finals 2020 where they will be joined by the four semi-finalists from the Finals 2019 (Spain, Canada, Great Britain and Russia) as well as two wild cards (France and Serbia). The 12 losing nations will compete in Zone Group action.
The Davis Cup by Rakuten Madrid Finals will take place over the course of one week, including opening and closing ceremonies. The 18 teams will compete in a group stage of six groups of three teams. The six group winners plus the two second-best teams based on sets won and games won will qualify for the quarter-finals.
In the 2019 Finals, Spain won its sixth Davis Cup title and became the first champions of the new format. Rafa Nadal, the team’s number one, was key to Spanish success, playing and winning each of his individual matches in addition to his doubles clashes, departing the Caja Mágica undefeated. Roberto Bautista was the other pillar of the team.
Canada, runner-up in 2019, demonstrated in Madrid that they are serious contenders for the title. For the first time in history, the team made the final of the competition and did so thanks to the contributions throughout 2019 of Denis Shapovalov (age 20), Felix Auger-Aliassime (19), and relative veteran Vasek Pospisil (29).
Russia and Serbia, two of the great favourites from last year’s Finals battled for a place in the semi-finals, taking their fight to a atie-break in the decisive third set of the last of their matches: the doubles. On one side of the court was the imposing Russian pair of Karen Khachanov and Andrey Rublev. On the other, Novak Djokovic with Viktor Troicki. In the end, Russia needed only one match point to press home the advantage.
Andy Murray, Nick Kyrgios, Gael Monfils, David Goffin, Diego Schwartzmann, and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga were among other top players appearing in the first edition of the Finals. Madrid was selected as the venue by the competition Steering Committee. From 18 to 24 November 2019, the 18 best national teams in the world met in the Spanish capital. In 2020, the event will take place from 23 to 29 November.
Below are the twelve cities hosting Davis Cup Qualifiers 2020 action:
Croatia (1) vs India. Zagreb (Croatia)
Belgium (2) vs Hungary. Debrecen (Hungary)
Argentina (3) vs Colombia Bogota (Colombia)
United States (4) vs Uzbekistan. Honolulu (United States)
Australia (5) vs Brazil. Adelaide (Australia)
Italy (6) vs South Korea. Cagliari (Italy)
Germany (7) vs Belarus. Düsseldorf (Germany)
Kazakhstan (8) vs Netherlands. Nur-Sultan (Kazakhstan)
Czech Rep. (9) vs Slovakia. Bratislava (Slovakia)
Austria (10) vs Uruguay. Graz (Austria)
Japan (11) vs Ecuador. Miki (Japan)
Sweden (12) vs Chile. Stockholm (Sweden)

Information

  • Category:
    Sports
  • Latest Version:
    2.0.0
  • Updated:
    2020-02-28
  • File size:
    38.9MB
  • Requirements:
    Android 4.1 or later
  • Developer:
    Davis Cup Finals
  • ID:
    com.kosmostennis.daviscupfinals
  • Available on:
Reviews
  • avatar
    I use frequently other tennis Apps. This is quite bad, difficult to use, no updated info, players of country appears in another country. The group points is not shown clearly. Totally useless, I gave 1 star because I cannot give 0
    2019-11-25 07:44
  • avatar
    Very bad UI, difficult to see previous group match scores - just gave up using, hopefully next year's should see an improvement.
    2019-11-24 05:01
  • avatar
    Worst tennis tournament app ever... Lordy where to start. Live scores slow and random or comical . No easy way to see results or the draw, or schedule. News out of date, alerts in the wrong languages, crashes... I take it this was either very cheap or very rushed.
    2019-11-24 11:50
  • avatar
    Completed matches have no score, or incomplete score. Match times seem to change at random. Match results aren't shown in the order in which they were played. I could go on... I've seen some bad tennis apps recently (the AO for the last few years, the Roland Garros app this year), but this might be the worst yet. And the Davis Cup website forces you to use the app to get live scores!
    2019-11-23 09:28
  • avatar
    Like the app... Only if there was a live streaming...
    2019-11-22 10:12
  • avatar
    Not as good as the old Davis Cup app but it seems easy to navigate
    2019-11-22 08:08