MADRID — Expanding the Davis Cup Finals to more venues will help attract more fans and avoid some of the late finishes that hurt the revamped event’s first edition, organizers said Thursday.
Madrid was the sole host of the inaugural edition of the restructured Davis Cup Finals in 2019. This time the Spanish capital will co-host the tournament along with Innsbruck, Austria, and Turin, Italy.
The 18-nation men’s tennis competition will take place on hard courts from Nov. 25 to Dec. 5. Last year’s event in Madrid was canceled because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Barcelona captain Gerard Pique, co-founder of the Kosmos group behind the new Davis Cup Finals, said the changes will give more fans a chance to watch the matches.
“Some of the matches ended very late, so we made the decision to go to other cities and to play in 11 days instead of seven,” Pique said at the event’s official launch Thursday. “The event has been evolving, maturing.”
After the tournament’s first edition, organizers said tweaks were needed to improve the new format of the international team event, which for 120 years had been played throughout the year and in venues around the world. The 2019 competition brought the nations to play in a single week in Madrid.
Organizers had been considering building more courts to help fix the scheduling problems that led to very late finishes in Madrid. The Italy-United States tie was among the many that finished after midnight, ending at 4:04 a.m. local time. Other ties took nearly nine hours to conclude and went well into the later sessions, prompting complaints from players, coaches and fans.
The location of the event in Madrid was changed from the Caja Magica tennis complex to the Madrid Arena, which for now is expected to be at 50% capacity because of the pandemic.
“We will see when we can sell more tickets,” Pique said. “I’m optimistic that we will be able to play with nearly full capacity.”
The venue in Innsbruck will be the Olympia-Halle, and Turin will stage matches at the Alpitour Arena. Each city will host two of the six groups in the team event. Madrid will stage two groups as well as two quarterfinal series, the semifinals and the final. Innsbruck and Turin will get one quarterfinal each.
Each city will host the country’s national team at the group stage.
The revamped Davis Cup is the result of a 25-year partnership between the International Tennis Federation and Kosmos to make the traditional team competition more attractive and lucrative.